The Dolly Sisters, Studio Manasse
The Dolly Sisters were popular vaudeville performers (I had to google them).
It's a cool picture of some cool vaudevillians with cool hair. Probably Hec would like it.
Anya ,'Showtime'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
The Dolly Sisters, Studio Manasse
The Dolly Sisters were popular vaudeville performers (I had to google them).
It's a cool picture of some cool vaudevillians with cool hair. Probably Hec would like it.
"I trust my body more than the CDC, FDA, or drug companies."
Natural selection for you.
NOAA says it is 40 degrees and breezy. My window tells me it is SNOWING and windy as all git out. Not going to poke my head out the door, but I'm willing to bet it is cold as crap too.
It's a cool picture of some cool vaudevillians with cool hair. Probably Hec would like it.
Cool bangs for sure.
What may look like a typical mint cookie, is really a diabolical and possibly hallucinogenic absinthe cookie. Who wants one? Absinth has steadily been gaining traction as a popular drink since the beginning of the 1990s. It was originally banned from the US and many parts of Europe in 1915, somewhat rashly in retrospect. The claims of any real psychoactive properties have largely been exaggerated, and the drink is no more dangerous than any ordinary spirit.
The fine people over at A Fine Kettle of Ish have the perfect recipe to fill you craving for the mysterious liquid covered cookie. You don't even need that much to make it, just some standard cookie making ingredients, some high quality absinthe, and food coloring. Apparently it also goes very well with strong coffee.
Fingers wrinkle to grip wet stuff better, toes wrinkle to better run in the rain. [link]
As a swimmer I have long wondered about the wrinkly fingers. This just makes so much sense!
Never gotten a flu shot...I'm kind of wigged out about getting injected with things.(Even though I did it with measles and other things to minimal ill effect, so, in theory I know it works.) But a bad case of the flu is a scary thought, too.
Just got my flu shot. Waiting to see if Sara already has the flu, though.
OMG, did we know there is such a thing as a hierarchy to what order you list people in the TO line in an email?
Yeah, I saw that on Corporette, and was befuddled. Other than sometimes making sure there's a difference between who's on the TO line and who's on the CC (people who should know but don't need to answer), no. I don't do that.
I don't care where I come on the email list, but I do deliberately adhere to the CIO/VP/Sr Director/Director/Manager/*my manager*/all the rest of the peons. And I've always done it, without pausing to consider.
I have a friend who works for a big law firm in St. Louis, and her office measures success based upon how many ceiling tiles your office counts. At a recent happy hour, I discovered another hierarchy of which I had previously been blissfully unaware—the email address ordering hierarchy.
Why is measuring success by the size of your office weird? There have got to be a lot of places doing that. And the whole office with a window, corner office, which floor, etc, etc...isn't that what we do, as sapient animals? Organise? And value? (If those two can be separated, that is)
Yeah, I think actually counting the tiles is kind of funny, but clearly office size is a marker of success. I know who can fit a table (my boss) and who can't (me).