Archive for August, 2009

irish chemist creates four leaf clovermarijuana hybrid

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Irish Chemist Creates Four Leaf Clover-Marijuana Hybrid

Writen by Andy Alt

A scientific breakthrough just in time for Saint Patrick’s Day, the world’s first Four Leaf Clover-Marijuana hybrid has been approved for private consumption. The only condition is that a wet towel be placed under the door prior to its use. The creation of this marvelous plant is sure to spark attention across the globe, and ensure that Ireland will be a famous country once again.

The new hybrid has been named The Four High-Ways Clover, but can be shortened to TfHC. Patty MacBrownie, the Irish chemist who created TfHC, has astonished the world by achieving his lifelong dream of proving beyond a scientific doubt that Four Leaf Clovers are indeed Lucky.

In Patty MacBrownie’s vision, he sees TfHC growing in every yard on Earth. “Every Shamrock Shake served by McDonald’s should include a few of my special leaves — preferably in multiples of four,” he commented. Mental Dimensions attempted a longer interview, but Patty appeared to be a bit drowsy. He offered us some brownies and sent us away to digest this new information.

Outside of Party McFarty’s Pub, we asked a frequent visitor of the establishment for a quick interview. When we inquired about his opinion on the hybrid, Reefer O’Keefe stated, “It’s nice to have an alternate method of intoxication. Green beer is a nice touch on Saint Patrick’s Day, but I prefer to drink lime vodka year-round. The only time my routine gets upset is when evil leprechauns cast spells on me. I could only ingest green kool-aid the last time I was cursed; anything else I drank made me throw up.”

“I’m quite happy to take part in Patty’s experiments, I get quite a kick out it, it makes me feel really good, like I’m flying…” Reefer O’Keefe abruptly strolled away, taking his green umbrella with him. We realized he must have been quite hungry, because he walked straight into the glass door of a bakery shop across the street.

The effects of The Four High-Ways Clover are yet to be known. Many people feel very happy about the new creation. Alternatively, there are some government officials who feel negatively, but they put me on a real bummer so I just avoided them. I traveled “far out” of the way and soon found myself on a park bench. I was slightly dazed, but I had jelly on my fingers and a donut in my mouth. I was doing quite well for myself.

Andy Alt
http://www.mentaldimensions.com/
Mental Dimensions Humor Ezine
Warped minds can come here for observational humor, comedy editorials, farce, satire and spoof.

a hidden oriental jewel quot100 chinese handmade silk embroideryquot

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

A Hidden Oriental Jewel: "100% Chinese Hand-Made Silk Embroidery"

Writen by Raymond Yuen

Introduction

Do you know what “silk embroidery is? Do you know what it looks like? Many people I come across in the U.S. are either unaware or unfamiliar with what silk embroidery is. Moreover, for the few who are familiar with this specialized Chinese skill, I have discovered that they do not have a true knowledge and appreciation for this fine Chinese art form. Thus, the implication can be made that “silk embroidery” is truly a “Hidden Oriental Jewel” that has been under appreciated in the West due mainly to the fact that the common person is ignorant of the time, effort, and skill required to create high-quality “silk embroidery” works. Hence, the purpose of this article will be to inform and educate you (whether the art lover or the common person) on: What is silk embroidery?, How it is made?, How to appreciate it?, etc. My hope is that you will acquire an appreciation for the uniqueness and value of this oft-overlooked Chinese art. Whether an art lover or not, I think you will come to appreciate the value of this “Hidden Oriental Jewel.”

What is Silk Embroidery?

Silk embroidery is a type of Oriental wall art that results from the traditional Chinese skill of pulling fine strands of colored silk through a canvas to create a beautiful work of art. The most common way to enjoy silk embroidery is as a framed, wall-hanging object. Hence, it is ideal as a gift, collectible, home decoration, souvenir, or office piece. The art of skill embroidery originated in China and has been practiced there for over 3,800 years. It reached a high level early in the Qing and Han dynasties, with silk and silk embroidery being the main products transported along the ancient Chinese Silk Road.

China was one of the first countries to transform embroidery into an advanced art form. The use of special embroidery techniques and styles sets apart Chinese embroidery from embroidery created in other parts of the world. In the past, embroidery skills were considered to be an essential skill every woman was to possess. A woman who could create a high-quality embroidery piece was admired and well-respected. Women from rich families took on embroidery as a hobby while those from poor families did it for a living. Today, high-quality embroidery works are treated on the same level as the best Chinese paintings and Tang/Song Dynasty poems

How To Appreciate Silk Embroidery?

Whether you’re an “art lover” or the “common person,” you’ll come to appreciate the value of silk embroidery once you learn of the skill and effort that goes into creating each piece. To create a high quality piece, an artist must split a single silk thread into several thinner threads. It can be split into 12 to 48 thinner strands - depending on how fine the artist wants to be with his/her piece. The embroiderer then stitches layer after layer using threads of a variety of colors to reach the final wonderful effect. Embroiderers are known to take frequent breaks - every 10 to 15 minutes - to rest their eyes due to the strenuous nature of their work.

Due to the labor-intensiveness of the work, some larger and more intricate pieces of embroidery may require a year to a year and a half to complete by an artist or group of artists. Those works sell for thousands of dollars, - which is reasonable - considering the skill and time involved in creating the work. Of course, smaller pieces are available that are of high quality yet sell for much less.

Four Types of Silk Embroidery The adoption of different needling methods through the years has resulted in four distinctive embroidery styles in China:

1) “Su” embroidery of Jiangsu Province - known for its delicacy and elegance, this style is usually very simple, highlighting a main theme. Its stitching is smooth, dense, thin, neat, even, delicate and harmonious. The thin thread is divided into up to 48 strands that are barely visible to the naked eye. Su embroidery is where double-sided embroidery originated. Su embroidery products were sent to participate in the Panama World Fair in 1915.

2) “Xiang” embroidery of Hunan Province - became the main craft in places around Changsha, capital city of Hunan Province, in the Qing Dynasty. Xiang embroidery was developed from Hunan folk embroidery methods, but it also drew on the skills of Su embroidery and Yue embroidery. This method uses loose colorful threads to embroider the pattern with the stitches being not as neat as those of other embroidery styles. The various colored threads are mixed together, showing a gradual change in color with a rich and harmonious tone. Designs on Xiang embroidery mostly derive from traditional Chinese paintings of landscapes, human figures, flowers, birds and animals. The most common designs on Xiang embroidery are lions and tigers. The tigers appear strong and bold, revealing their power and menace as a king of animals. Xiang embroidery won the best award in the Torino World Fair in Italy in 1912 and the First Award in the Panama World Fair in 1933.

3) “Yue” embroidery of Guangdong Province - is rich and complicated in content with bright colors and strong decorative effects. The embroidery is smooth and even. One type, gold and silver cushion embroidery, creates a magnificent three-dimensional effect. Yue embroidery has a wide range of designs, the most common ones being birds worshipping the sun, dragons and phoenixes.

4) “Shu” embroidery of Sichuan Province - are mostly found in Chengdu, the capital city of Sichuan Province. They are made with soft satins and colored threads as the raw materials are embroidered by hand. The varied stitching methods form their unique local style. Designs on Shu embroidery include flowers, birds, landscapes, fish, worms and human figures. The products themselves include quilt covers, pillow covers, back cushions, table cloths, scarves and handkerchiefs.

Western-Style Silk Embroidery

Western-style silk embroidery occurs as the result of an artist using fine silk strands and needles to accurately reproduce famous Western-style oil paintings (see figure 2) - like Van Gogh and Da Vinci. It is truly amazing how an embroidery artist can literally take silk strands and create a silk reproduction of a well-known artist’s oil painting.

Essentially, the artist paints with fine silk strands instead of painting with oil. Think about it . . . does this not perhaps require more skill than painting with oil itself? Despite the difference in materials and technique, one thing about a silk embroidery work is that - from a distance - it can very much resemble a work of oil painting .

From up close, however, one can notice the colorful patterns and detailed stitching in a silk embroidery work. In fact, the colors will appear more bright and lively than the usually duller colors of an oil painting.

Double-Sided Silk Embroidery

Double-sided silk embroidery is the result of an advanced embroidery technique in which the artist stitches on both sides of a single transparent silk canvas. The embroidered design displays on both the front and back sides of the fabric and does not show the joints in the stitching. Such a work is normally mounted as a screen on a wooden frame. A special feature about double-sided silk embroidery is that you can enjoy the artist’s handiwork from either side of the picture.

How To Mount & Store Silk Embroidery

Mounting a piece of silk embroidery can be an art in and of itself.

Hard Mounting - is most suitable for small to medium-sized embroidery pieces. It involves mounting the piece on a wooden board or frame with a front protective glass. The mounting technique is relatively easy to master.

Soft Mounting - is most suitable for larger pieces. It involves mounting the embroidery piece on a large sheet of paper with a silk border. The mounting technique is very difficult to master. As a result, due to the nature of the mounting technique, a piece with soft mounting is more valuable.

Storing - be sure to wrap embroidery pieces in a container that protects it from moths. Also, embroidery should not be exposed to strong light - especially sunshine - for an extended period of time. Moreover, the environment should be neither too wet nor too dry.

Recommended Reading

1) Art of Oriental Embroidery: History, Aesthetics, &… by Young Yang Chung.

2) Painting with a Needle: Learning the Art of Silk Embroidery by Young Yang Chung

This article was written by Raymond Yuen of Eternal Imports (EI). EI specializes in the provision of unique, hand-made, quality products from around the world. You may check them out at http://www.rejoiceinarts.com

fishing for trivia

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Fishing For Trivia

Writen by Deanna Mascle

1. We all know that fish travel in schools, but do you know some other plural fishey names?
A. Clutch
B. Shoal
C. Draft
D. Wave
E. All of the above
F. None of the above
G. B and C

G. B and C
TBD: It should have been wave though, don’t you think?

2. Can you name the phobia that means a fear of fish?
A. Ichthyophobia
B. Limnophobia
C. Entomophobia
D. Pantophobia

A. Ichthyophobia
TBD: If you have a fear of lakes you suffer from limnophobia, of insects you have entomophobia, and of everything its pantophobia.

3. How do fish hear?
A. They don’t
B. Through sound vibrations reverberating through the bones of their skull
C. Through their gills
D. Through their fins

B. Through sound vibrations reverberating through the bones of their skull
TBD: Fish hear without the aid of external ears. Sound vibrations reverberate through the bones of the skull to an internal ear. Fish also possess unique sensory organs called lateral lines. These canals along the sides of the fish can sense vibrations and, in some species, weak electrical fields.

4. What do you call a baby fish?
A. A guppy
B. A fry
C. A minnow
D. A baby fish

B. A fry
TBD: We guess that’s where the expression “small fry” came from!

5. How do Anarctic icefish survive in freezing water?
A. Special antifreeze chemicals in their blood
B. Extra layers of fat which earned them the nickname “Puffy Fish”
C. Constant high level of motion to keep blood circulating
D. There is no such fish

A. Special antifreeze chemicals in their blood
TBD: We would have thought this was a made up answer if we hadn’t researched it ourselves!

6. Just how much hot water can fish take?
A. Pot boilers in Ecuador survive in hot springs approaching 200 degrees Fahrenheit
B. Desert pupfish found in hot springs of western North America live in temperatures higher than 100 degrees Fahrenheit
C. Some fresh-water fish can take temperatures up to 80 degrees Fahrenheit without difficulty
D. Anything over 60 degrees Fahrenheit causes distress

B. Desert pupfish found in hot springs of western North America live in temperatures higher than 100 degrees Fahrenheit
TBD: We know we couldn’t live in those springs without cooking!

7. How high can a flying fish fly?
A. 6 feet
B. 36 feet
C. 60 feet
D. 360 feet

B. 36 feet
TBD: Their flight may consist of several glides, in which they repeatedly return to the surface of the water long enough to renew their propelling power. They rise to a maximum of about 36 feet into the air and glide as far as 200 yards.

8. Just how fast can a fish swim?
A. Never over 40 mph
B. Barely 50 mph
C. About 60 mph
D. Over 70 mph

D. Over 70 mph
TBD: The fastest-swimming fish are the billfish and the tunas. One billfish, the sailfish, can swim in bursts of speed over 70 mph.

9. Known as one of the fastest fish, tunas are also built for long-distance endurance. How far do tuna migrate?
A. 7700 miles
B. 770 miles
C. 77 miles
D. 7 miles

A. 7700 miles
TBD: Swimming as fast as 30 mph, they migrate as far as 7700 miles in only four months.

10. What are the biggest fish?
A. Whales
B. Whale sharks
C. Great white sharks
D. Leviathans

B. Whale sharks
TBD: Whale sharks can reach 40 feet in length. Yes, whales are bigger, but they are not fish. Fish are cold-blooded and breathe underwater using gills; whales, on the other hand, maintain a warm and constant body temperature.

You can enjoy more trivia created by Deanna Mascle at Trivia By Dawggone, Fun Trivia Online, and Trivia Tidbit.

mad cow

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Mad Cow

Writen by Vicki Nunn

At 19 years of age, I knew little of country life, but became a Governess on a cattle property/ranch. While employed as Governess, I was expected not only to teach lessons to the two children and provide activities after school, but I was required to help with housework, cooking and other chores. One of my duties was to tie up the milking cow each afternoon in readiness for milking. Although the ‘milker’ possessed one wicked looking horn, the Manager assured me she was harmless, and so I undertook this task for a few weeks without incident.

One afternoon I made my way to the shed and as I walked towards the milker she dropped her head and suddenly lunged towards me. I dodged behind a nearby fence, my heart pounding madly. Had I imagined that whole thing? Was the milker really trying to attack me? Regathering my courage, I once more made my way towards her, but the beast charged me again. I dashed out of the yard and ran back to the house.

After I waited for the Manager to return to the residence, I explained what had happened. He was totally unimpressed with my story and suggested his disgust at my town breeding. Grunting, he indicated for me to follow him, and we made our way back to the shed. When we reached it, the Manager grumbled under his breath. There stood the old milker placidly chewing her cud and looking anything but menacing. The Manager threw me a scathing look and muttered a few choice words as he opened the gate and confidently strode towards the cow. A couple of metres from the cow, the Manager’s footsteps faltered and I looked across as the milker slowly drop her head.

There was a long second when both man and cow regarded each other with suspicion and a hint of superiority. Abruptly the milker lunged towards the Manager, her one horn aimed straight at his belly. With an almighty yell, the Manager leapt up and over the one and a half metre fence in a huge leap, somehow just managing to keep his bottom from being pierced.

For a large man, it was an incredible jump!

The walk back to the house was very quiet, and after that little incident, I was no longer required to tie up the milking cow. I can’t say that I was at all sorry. Comments about my town breeding were reduced to an occasional aside, and I think the little glint of triumph in my eyes discouraged any further comment from the Manager.

—————————————————–

In her spare time off from saving the world, Vicki likes to inject humour as often as possible into her contact with others, into her writings and into her weekly radio program. You can find out more about Vicki on her website http://www.nunnsense.net. Vicki Nunn is also an author on http://www.Writing.Com which is a site for aspiring writers.

red lanterns chinese food and a little more

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Red Lanterns, Chinese Food, and a Little More

Writen by Rajesh Kanoi

Those beautiful red lanterns that hang invitingly outside so many establishments have come to signify a lot - in Kabul, of all the places. Kabul, embattled, bruised and bleeding is not quite broken. It’s attracting Chinese restaurants by the dozens.

I can imagine the tough Pathans as they make their way out of the restaurants, smacking their lips in delight, thinking, “Chinese tastes delicious”.

China Daily reports how many Chinese restaurants have sprung up in Kabul’s upmarket areas. But the police are cracking down on them because a Chinese meal there signifies more than just chilly chicken and fried wantons. It signifies food of a higher (or lower) nature, depending on where you’re coming from.

Scores of Chinese women have been arrested for allegedly feeding the lust of mostly expats and some Afghans too, thus unleashing moral corruption among its holy denizens. In China, women are often ‘afraid’ of getting too close to foreigners, though many do. There are size issues - how can the petite and tiny fit in what is large and ‘monstrous’? There are social issues, too. How can Chinese men accept a woman who is seen with foreigners? Some of the whys and the wherefores have hilarious explanations that I am not going to delve upon here but might some other time, elsewhere. Yet, many Chinese women end up in Kabul. These Chinese are amazing!

What is the allure that these women possess for men from different parts of the world? Men are drawn to them like bees to honey! Don’t ask me…I know! But, honey going to where the bees are?

Chinese women are very gentle and soft spoken. Men, too, are but less so! And very reticent. They don’t show what’s in their minds and hearts too easily. One needs to figure them out through little signs and indications. Life and everything in it is like a game of Mahjongg. You have your pieces and she has hers and the pieces are always moving as one throws some on the board and picks new ones. You must guess and outguess but never be outguessed or you’re dead meat. Why? I don’t know…perhaps, Confucius’s legacy lives!

Chinese women rarely speak the L word, except to a husband or a boyfriend/lover. At best she can say ’she likes you’. And, that too is rare. Once, when I was quite new here, I repeated ‘wo xihuan ni’ (I like you) at the instigation of a colleague to a young lady teacher. She ran after me - to hit me with a badminton racquet! It was in jest…but could have been worse. Ever since, I have never uttered even the ‘like’ word. Who knows, what might come after me next?

I wonder, then, how they make do in Kabul. And, how those little Chinese meals match those monstrous appetites! Foreigners in China, and there are quite a few, often privately accuse Chinese women of being passport-hunters. Perhaps, there are a few. European and North American passports have their own allure for many Asians. But, there are also women who couldn’t care a fig about the passports. They know ‘their China’ is on the way up. Yet, they land up in the ruins of a Kabul-under-reconstruction!

China is changing at a pace faster than appears to the eye. And, the Chinese are not losing the race. They will be wherever the action is - and if there is no action, they will create it, wherever that might be. It’s quite common to see a couple embracing, or a woman riding piggyback (a sure sign of the oven on fire) and kissing on the street. Yet, when you meet them face-to-face they will use the tag of tradition to tell you they’re in only for the long haul…no short-term measures for them. Dangle the carrot of marriage and you might be the proud partner of one of the creamiest-skinned creatures on earth. Sometimes, I guess, a hundred dollar bill works just as well…for the short-term. But, how can that satisfy a hunger that’s more recurring than that for chilly chicken or fried wantons?

Kabul’s calling! Wanna go? But, with the police there chasing all the honey and the honey chasing after money, it might be too much of an ask. I wonder if the crackdown there is because the police are jealous!

“Nobody is really sure how the Chinese came to dominate the market. But in Kabul, traditional Chinese lanterns outside a restaurant can mean more is on offer than just good food,” reports China Daily. I, for one, am quite sure!

Rajesh Kanoi (Jack) is a published writer, now living and working in China. Many of his short-stories, poems and articles have been published, including a book of short-stories, ‘Tales From China’ (Lipstick Publishing).

http://o3.indiatimes.com/kjack

http://www.writingup.com/blog/oneinabillion

the brilliant rejection dating maneuver

Monday, August 24th, 2009

The Brilliant Rejection Dating Maneuver

Writen by Robert Crane

I was talking one day with my two teenage niecesboth sensible young women who apparently have never suffered through the dating experiences I had wrestled with. I started the conversation because I was curious as to the techniques and strategies of the mating dance in the 21st Century. After all, it was my casual observation that dating, as I knew it in the Sixties, had died some years ago.

With patience and a healthy respect for elders, the girls gave me an inside look into their world, although I did get a few rolling eyeballs and a couple of those dad-was-right-Uncle-Bob-is-really-dense, big-eyed, blank stares. But they hung in there like champs and explained to me the rules of modern engagement.

I learned that “hooking up” is grounds for locking up and “hanging out” is something between a date and a party. I’m pretty sure that there is still a concept of dating but it no longer leads to “going out” or “going steady”. It simply leads to more dates closer together which eventually lead to some kind of nameless monogamous relationship, at which point all roads lead to ownership, jealousy and breaking up. Whew, at least something is still the same.

As for the process of engagement, it is accomplished by IM’ing, or entering chat room discussions, or text messaging on cell phones. Essentially you can contact potential targets in the safety of your basement or bathroom or garage, without even actually talking to them directly. That translates into a New Cowardly World void of dark snarling parents, crackling octave-changing nervous voices, irritable bowel syndrome, and most importantly, the cold bludgeoning slam of a callous phone rejection. It’s just servers, routers, cell towers, satellites and keypads nowadays.

It is sad in a way that this has all changed because I had mastered a dating technique so sophisticated in its simplicity that it is a shame to see it whither away like so many of my other inventive adolescent coping skillsand I had developed a sack full of them.

The technique is called “The Rejection Dating Maneuver”.

Its birth was the result of the following phone call I made to supposedly a very sweet girl whom I had been introduced to about a week before that lowly moment. It was my first “cold” call to a girl for a date. (note: the following is an excerpt from a short story I wrote called “The Rejection Dating Maneuver”. It is one from a collection of short stories entitled, “Still Living in the Sixties”, available to read for free at my website)

After a lengthy pause, during which my short uneventful life passed before me, I released the last digit of her phone number on the rotary phone. I stared blankly at the spinning dial, clutching my sweat soaked notes between my thumb and index finger, unaware of my trembling hands.

deh-deh-deh-deh-deh-deh-deh dah!

Silence.

My ear began to sweat against the receiver.

Ringtone!

Rehrehringgg Rehrehringgg Rehreh

“Ya-ello?” a deep voice boomed into my ear.

Oh my god! It was her dad; her raspy voiced, connected (as in Tony Soprano connected) dad of all people. I never expected that he’d be home that night. I figured he’d be out breaking legs or making books or both, but not at home on a Friday night.

I needed to respond. He was waiting for some kind of sign of life from my end of the phone. But my vision was blurred from anxiety, rendering the stupid script I held in my shaking hand useless. My lips were glued together with fear. But somehow I managed to eek out some sounds.

“Umm hello umm is Gina umm home?” I cackled like a constipated Leghorn hen.

“Yeah she’s home. Who’s calling?”

I I I didn’t know. Who was I? Quick my notes!

“Yeah, this is Bob. Umm Crane. That’s Bob Crane who this is.” I answered in broken English, as smooth as Barney Fife on crack cocaine.

“Bob Crane huh? You that Hogan’s Heroes guy? You Hogan?”

Was I? Maybe I was. I checked my notes. Nothing there.

“No sir. Just regular Bob Crane. No Hogan Bob Crane. I’m just regular. I like Hogan’s Heroes but that isn’t me. I’m just”

Her dad cut me off.

“I get it. You’re not. Jesus Christ I was just jokin’ with ya son. Hold on!”

“Thank you!” But before I finished, he covered the phone with what I could only imagine was his thick knuckled hand.

Though muted, I could still clearly hear him.

“Gina! Phone!”

Muffled voice.

“The guy from Hogan’s Heroes!”

Muffled voice.

“Just pick up!”

It felt like an hour but I think it was about three seconds.

Click.

“Got it Daddy.”

Click.

“Hello”

“Hi Gina?”

“Yeah?”

“This is Bob Crane.”

“Who?”

“Bob Crane. We met about a week ago. Remember? After band practice? Carteret Park?”

“Were you the guy wearing that red bandanna with the big floppy socks like that basketball player, ‘Rifle Rick’?”

“‘Pistol Pete’ yeah.”

“Yeah, I remember you.”

Silence. Hmm she remembered. I guess I was looking pretty cool. But there was no time to bask. Where was I in the script? My notes!

“Yeah, I was wondering if maybe you’d like to go out to the movies or something?”

“No. I don’t think so.”

Yeeoowser! That hurt.

But I didn’t stop. I continued along the script like a runaway train. I was so nervous that I am pretty sure the receiver was shoved up into my ear canal, pressing against the eardrum, making it impossible to listen.

“I was thinking we could see The Last Picture Show.”

“Bye.”

Click.

“I can pick you up at 7 okay?”

Dial tone.

“Okay, see ya then. Bye.”

I gently lowered the receiver and placed it onto the cradle. I felt sick to my stomach. I stared at the phone. It stared back, snickering.

(end of exerpt)

At that very moment I went from “loser” lowercase to “LOSER” uppercase.

But not for long. Soon I would develop the “maneuver” and what a sweet maneuver it would be.

Without going through the long story of how I figured this all out (read the story), it eventually occurred to me that it was not getting a date that mattered as much as it was controlling the rejection. It was, after all, rejectioncold unadulterated rejectionthat was at the heart of my searing pain. I needed to become one with rejection. And what better way to do that than guarantee rejection. So going forward, I did just that. I always made sure to schedule a first date at a time when I was positive the girl could not make it.

Knowing full well rejection was guaranteed, it was just a matter of judging how I was rejected that would determine if I would make a follow-up call for a real date.

And you know what? It worked perfectly. Girls who wanted a date pleaded for me to call back, sometimes telling me what time worked best for them. In a rare case or two, they even rescheduled the date right then and there. As for those girls who were uninterested or violently ill at the thought, they simply jumped on the built-in excuse and politely bowed out. My feelings were never hurt. It was a beautiful thing. And I used it unapologetically for years with great results.

Needless to say, I handed this little juicy morsel down to my son. He has embraced it. And he has assured me should the dating world ever return to the days of the rotary dial phone, he will be ready and he will be thankful for my guidance. He also asked that I not share it with anyone else, that it be our little secret. I did not promise (to his chagrin).

And now I share it with all. Sorry son. My mission is now complete.

The article above was written by humorist Robert Crane. It is a short version of his story, “The Rejection Dating Maneuver”, from his collection of stories titled, “Still Living in the Sixties”, a Shepherd/Sedaris like romp through his life as a teenager growing up during a testy decade.

You can read the entire collection for free (no nonsense) at his website: http://www.cranelegs.com

flood washington dc and washout corruption

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

Flood Washington DC and Washout Corruption

Writen by Lance Winslow

Well I guess we cannot get the corruption out of Washington DC, but we can certainly flood them out of Office. These Politicians think they can do as they please and get away with running our government into bankruptcy. These politicians think they can ignore the American People as they barricade themselves in and protect themselves from International Terrorists and allow our nations borders to remain unguarded.

These politicians think it is okay to have lobbyists supply them with homosexual prostitutes when they have sworn to protect the American People. These politicians think they can assault policemen and get away with it, above the laws. These politicians think they can do drugs and drive.

These politicians think they take bribes and buy million dollar homes and get free Rolls Royce automobiles. These politicians think they can stand up at the podium and push their lies onto the American People.

Well I know something that they do not, I know you might be able to cheat your way into office. You might be able to act above the laws now. But there is no way in hell you can get away from the laws of Mother Nature. You cannot hide in your barricaded city; we will flood you out of there by God.

The floods have only just begun. Just stay there and drown do not bother coming out and showing you faces in public anymore. You have not upheld the Constitution, you have not made good on your promises to the American People, you can now face the wrath of Mother Nature you sorry soggy scoundrels. Consider all this in 2006 and Vote for Lance.

“Lance Winslow” - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; http://www.WorldThinkTank.net/wttbbs/

fauvism

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

Fauvism

Writen by Margaret Houghton

Fauvism began in 1905. It was a short-lived movement and included a group of artists who used deep, more intense color than the work of the Impressionists. With simplified lines the subjects were easy to decipher. Objects were painted in any colour and the perspectives exaggerated.

‘Fauves’ means wild beasts in French. The finished look of the work was immaterial as the artists just painted what they visualized.

Leading the movement were Henri Matisse and Andre Derain. See Matisse’s 1908 ‘The Dessert’; and/or Derain’s ‘The Two Barges’.

Fauvism, had no concrete theories. Matisse’s aim was to use art as decoration. Seeing a work by Matisse one senses the feeling of d

google it you moron

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

Google It You Moron

Writen by Shailesh Gopale

I approached my boss with some technical problem, expecting some answer. He barked, “GOOGLE IT YOU MORON”. I didnt got the answer still I asked shylessly, “Whats the meaning of moron?”. Again he screamed, “Google it you moron?”. I returned to my desk and first googled the meaning of moron.. Idiot.

Somewhat frustrated I left office to watch a movie. The first half was good, but there were surprises for me in the second half.

The hero was asking heroine, “Darl, Do you love me?”, A minute of silence and then the heroine replied, “Google it you moron”. Because this new gen heroine writes a blog and she also posts about her love afair.

I thought people have got answer for all questions, just say, “Google it you moron”.

The angry young hero went to his home, and asked his mother, “Maa, saari duniya mujhe najayaz kahati hai, Batao kaun hai mera baap?”. The modern maa with tears in her eyes replied, “Google it you moron, you will definately get his name.”

Now I started to hate google, and left the movie hall. All time on my way to home I was thinking, and wondering. Can’t I ask simple questions to anyone now? Do I have to search google for everything I want to know?

I was talking insanely with myself, I was near to my home, standing at crossroads I forgot which road goes to my home, I asked a man standing nearby, “Which road leads to Highway Signal?”, The man replied, “Google it you moron, you will get this information on website of Municipal Corporation.”

Now I can’t hear google’s name anymore, I was screaming on the road, “Goooooogle eeeeeeeet uuuuuuuuuuuu moooorooooooooooooooooon”

You must be thinking Is this guy mad?, Well the answer is simple. “Google it you moron”. You might find my name in on some mental hospital’s website.

————————————————– About Author -

A Simple Person trying to understand this complex world. Blogs at - http://theignorant.blogspot.com

I see this world with eyes of a curious child,
In my mind questions gallore,
All why’s and how’s I want to explore ,
My Blog is about my endless curiosity,
The way I see the world,
I am not an expert, neither wise nor gifted,
I am The Ignorant, a curious child

halloween howler

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

Halloween Howler

Writen by Deanna Mascle

1. What rock star worked as a gravedigger before starting his musical career?
A. Roy Orbison
B. Billy Joel
C. Mick Jaggar
D. Rod Stewart

1. What famous rock star worked as a gravedigger before starting his musical career?
D. Rod Stewart
TBD: That wasn’t The QuizQueen’s guess either, but that’s what the research says!

2. Which tradition was NOT a precursor to Halloween?
A. The Celtic tradition of giving thanks at the close of the harvest season?
B. The European tradition of lighting candles and masquerading in costume to scare evil spirits away.
C. The celebration of the birth of Marilyn Manson.
D. The Irish custom where wealthy landowners would give food to the poor in hopes that the ghosts would look favorably on them and spare them from mischief.

2. Which tradition was NOT a precursor to Halloween?
C. The celebration of the birth of Marilyn Manson.
TBD: Gosh The QuizQueen sure hopes you got that right. Although who knows what historians in the next Millenium will conclude after studying the effluvium we leave behind.

3. Which phobia is the fear of Halloween?
A. Caspariophobia
B. Samhainophobia
C. Demonophobia
D. Boophobia

3. Which phobia is the fear of Halloween?
B. Samhainophobia
TBD: Personally, The QuizQueen has always been more frightened of Caspar than Celts, but you can’t quibble with the facts.

4. Where does the name “Halloween” come from?
A. In Scotland, the Celtic Feast of the Sun, which marked the end of summer was known as “Hallowe’en.”
B. In Ireland, the Celtic Feast of the Sun, which marked the end of summer was known as “Hollow Eve.”
C. The Druids held a ritual on that night honoring the leader of their sect. His name was Hal Ween.
D. The Roman ceremony of burying a hollow casket to trap evil spirits beneath the ground.

4. Where does the name “Halloween” come from?
A. In Scotland, the Celtic Feast of the Sun, which marked the end of summer was known as “Hallowe’en.”
TBD: The QuizQueen really hopes you didn’t answer “C” here.

5. What is the purpose of a witch’s familiar?
A. Hey, everybody has to have a friend, even Broomhilda.
B. The stooge she sends out to lure innocent victims to her lair.
C. An animal, such as a black cat, that amplifies her power.
D. Every witch is required to have a black cat, according to coven code, so it has become tradition to see the “familiar” black cat at a witch’s side.

5. What is the purpose of a witch’s familiar?
C. An animal, such as a black cat, that amplifies her power.
TBD: While “A” might be true, this is the real answer.

6. Lycanthropy is a term derived from Greek. What does it mean?
A. A psychiatric state in which the patient believes he or she is a wolf.
B. A person with a deadly fear of wearing Lycra (which is used in the making of some Halloween costumes).
C. A devotee of Lycos, the ancient Roman god whose feast was originally held on Halloween.
D. An inductee of the cult of Zeus which held a yearly gathering on Mt. Lycaeus.

6. Lycanthropy is a term derived from Greek. What does it mean?
A. A psychiatric state in which the patient believes he or she is a wolf.
TBD: The QuizQueen has always wondered what they call someone with a deadly fear of Lycra

7. How did the “jack-o-lantern” get that name?
A. An old man named Jack who was too mean even to get into hell.
The Devil gave him a piece of burning coal and sent him away. Jack used a turnip to hold the burning coal and serve as a lantern.
B. The Devil’s favorite dish is pumpkin pie and a clever man named Jack carved all the pumpkins in town into lanterns to drive the Devil away with a blaze of bright light and of course deprive him of his treat.
C. In ancient times, when children went trick-or-treating, they were guided by a man who carried a lantern. The guide was called a “Jack.”
D. The man who first cultivated the potato and carved it into a lantern was named Jack.

7. How did the “jack-o-lantern” get that name?
A. A mean old man named Jack who was too mean even to get into hell. The Devil gave him a piece of burning coal and sent him away. Jack used a turnip to hold the burning coal and serve as a lantern.
TBD: You should deduct points if you guessed any of The QuizQueen’s creative answers!

8. Can you pick out Halloween’s former name?
A. All Hallow’s Eve
B. All Hallow’s Day
C. All Hallowmass
D. All Soul’s Day

8. Can you pick out Halloween’s former name?
A. All Hallow’s Eve
TBD: The important thing to remember is that it was the NIGHT before!

9. The word warlock is a derivation of the Saxon-English term “war-loek” which means what?
A. Man with the magic hands
B. Oath breaker
C. Witch’s husband
D. Doomed one

9. The word warlock is a derivation of the saxon-english term “war-loek” which means what?
B. Oath breaker.
TBD: Did you sing along with “A”?

10. The Celtics would carry a lantern when they walked on the eve of October 31st. These first “jack-o-lanterns” were carved with faces to scare evil spirits away. What vegetable was originally used to make a “jack-o-lantern?”
A. Turnip
B. Potato
C. Pumpkin
D. Watermelon

10. The Celtics would carry a lantern when they walked on the eve of October 31st. These first “jack-o-lanterns” were carved with faces to scare evil spirits away. What vegetable was originally used to make a “jack-o-lantern?”
A. Turnip
TBD: Sometimes you don’t even need to set up the joke.

You can enjoy more trivia created by Deanna Mascle at Trivia By Dawggone, Fun Trivia Online, and Trivia Tidbit.