This is my wife. Once a year, Kohls may have some clothes in their junior's section that look professional enough for her to wear to work and that fit her. Otherwise, she pretty much just has to sew them herself.
This is my wife. Once a year, Kohls may have some clothes in their junior's section that look professional enough for her to wear to work and that fit her. Otherwise, she pretty much just has to sew them herself.
I prefer bottom freezers. With my height and normal top freezers, the freezer blocks my line of sight of the top 2 1/2 shelves. Unless I get on my knees, I can't see most of the top shelf. I'm in the fresh food section much more often, so it is way more convenient for me to have that on top.
I bought one. I wasn't impressed.
Two (semi)relevant points:
I wouldn't do this to a mattress that is still under warranty. You could potentially void the warranty.
Not saying I agree/disagree, but aren't we over-sensationalizing this just a tad? Last time I checked, Plan B was like $50. Most people have at least a $15 Rx co-pay anyway, so we're talking an extra $35. That is a small price to pay for a night of indiscretion.
Russian girls are pretty good at running in heels. I've seen them sprint after the bus in stilettos that most American girls could hardly walk in.
They will wear skirts as a dress uniform for people working in the police station, or for parades. You'd never see someone on duty on the streets in a skirt though. In fact, I don't think I ever even saw any female officers on the street. Most cities are so dangerous that the guys go out in groups of three.
Nope. I've stood on that exact spot. It is most definitely in Russia.
I posted elsewhere, but this is really close to the university. That might explain the picture. There is also a police academy nearby with young college students.
Seeing that picture makes me miss Yekaterinburg. Of course, I don't think I ever saw any police officers dressed like that. This is most likely a bunch of college girls dressing up in costumes. This picture was taken close enough to campus for that to be a reasonable explanation. The crime rate in Yekat isn't bad…
After losing a major battle (and LOTS of blood) to my mandolin, I invested in a pair of these:
Touche.
Nope. And last time I checked, the Civil Rights Act does not mention sexual orientation, and it has an exemption for private clubs, which the BSA is.
Who is this "we" you speak of? I certainly didn't participate, nor do I approve of those actions. Are you trying to say that two wrongs make a right?
A leader in any church youth group is supposed to be a role model for the kids he/she leads. Most church leaders would not want someone who is openly sinning to be in charge of leading youth. This should apply equally whether that person is a wife-beater, a fornicator, a homosexual, or even a shoplifter. The whole…
I don't understand why everyone thinks it is a basic human right to force your ideology on others. If you don't like a group's ideology, start your own. Don't force everyone else to accept yours. You wouldn't join a chess club and insist that everyone play checkers instead, because you aren't good at chess. Start…
I'd be totally OK with that, but like another commenter said, I'd be afraid that some idiot would call the cops.
My rule is that I have to be able to maintain eye contact, and be able to make it to the car in 10 steps or less. This rules out just about everything other than paying for gas or carrying packages into the UPS store. I'd never leave the car on though.
Wow. I knew that they did this as an option on business accounts, but doing it as an opt-out feature for home users is shady. I'm not sure how much I trust the modem to segregate the networks properly, not to mention I'm not thrilled about them adding even more interference into the wifi spectrum.