Howdy, Hec! I''ll probably play tentatively at first. I'm not up-to-date with music and haven't been for years so I feel a little like I have not-so-much to contribute. Also, I turned 40 in Sept. and I think my lifestyle, etc. have finally made me have to admit it. I'M MIDDLE-AGED.
Eek!
I take it back. It wasn't an article, it was a chapter of this book: [link]
That actually sounds like an interesting book, but I think it may be because I am interested in religion and theatre and how they intersect.
This chapter I would like to read:
Chapter 3: Dramatizing Leadership
Theater Through the Ages
The Theater Metaphor in Organization Studies
Theater in The HBR Interviews: From Morality Play to Global Show
Dramatic Range
Putting On a Show
Question: what's the difference between ballpoint and rollerball pens? And is one considered more fancy than the other?
Also, I like the good Christmas music -- the stuff with trumpets and sopranos and lots of Latin, or the stuff in minor keys. Not a big fan of "Jingle Bell Rock" (mostly because it's a whole lot easier to get that irritatingly stuck in your head than, say, "Adeste Fidelis").
Finally, what the hell do I get my brother? I don't even know what he's planning to do with his life now, but I need to get him one nice unexpected present, to go with his wish-list stuff.
Ballpoint pens use more visc(i)ous ink (and a simpler ink feeding mechanism, I think), Emily. Rollerballs may be more fancy because they're newer, but really, they both pale in the face of a proper fountain pen.
Ahhh. Wikipedia, how do we love thee??
Rollerball pens use a ball point and a water-based ink. By comparison, a typical ball-point pen uses a ball point and an oil-based ink. The ink in a roller ball tends to saturate more deeply and more widely into the paper than the ink from a ball-point pen.
they both pale in the face of a proper fountain pen.
Yeah, I thought about a fountain pen, but I'm not sure it's really his kind of thing.
The ink in a roller ball tends to saturate more deeply and more widely into the paper than the ink from a ball-point pen.
And is this a good thing?
Wait, so the difference is just the ink? But... but...
I like rollerballs, because I can write more gracefully with them.