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Latest Articles
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by John Hartnett - 2006-12-07
Last Sunday, I took my son and five of his buddies to celebrate his birthday at Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum located right in the heart of the theatre district in New York's Times Square.We drove over ...
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by John Hartnett - 2006-12-07
Do you know what a paradox is? Doesn't matter. I'm going to give you an example any way. A paradox is when a family comes within a hair's breadth of killing each other in order to attend mass on time ...
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by John Hartnett - 2006-12-07
I was driving down a major avenue in my town the other day when I had to slam on the brakes to avoid running over a couple of Canadian geese. There were four geese and they were walking across the str...
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by Kevin Forth - 2006-12-06
Almost daily I'm reminded of my disdain of marketers. They've complicated my life with decisions that I'd prefer not to make. Apparently, I now have to decide what flavor my hair should be each day.Ha...
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by Jestine Yong - 2006-12-04
How to make balloon animals is so easy, what you need is some balloons, a pump and a little bit of twisting techniques and you will be able to sculpture animal's designs within minutes. There are so m...
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by Patricia Nordman - 2006-12-02
These are ACTUAL announcements from church bulletins:1. Don't let worry kill you. Let the Church help.2. Remember in prayer the many who are sick of our church and community.3. For those of you who ha...
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by Vicki Churchill - 2006-11-30
We all like to play games, we all need to play games whether they are board games, video games, outdoor sports or just messing about with our partner games we all have an innate desire to play.Playing...
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by Vicki Churchill - 2006-11-30
We all like to laugh and a smile and there is no quicker way to evoke joy than looking at cartoons and humorous pictures.For as long as man has been able to paint and draw, funny pictures and cartoons...
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by Philip F. Taylor - 2006-11-30
We all know the Overlaughers. We encounter them in everyday life. You may even be an Overlaugher. Typically the Overlaughers have no idea they are one. Typically, Overlaughers also annoy the hell out ...
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by Tom Attea - 2006-11-24
Anybody who has wended his or her way through the linguistic excellences and frequently petulant schemers in Shakespeare's plays longs, at some point, to say to Lady Macbeth herself, "Out, out, damned...
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by Tom Attea - 2006-11-24
(Suggestion: Read The First Half of Part One First)"What?""Brush burns.""What do you mean?""What are we making the skin out of, vinyl?""You're right. Hey, I have it.""What?""We take an idea right off ...
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by Tom Attea - 2006-11-24
An unexpected manuscript showed up in our inbox. We were immediately convinced of its authenticity and decided we had to share it with you. It was accompanied by the following note:"Hi, there. How's l...
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by Tom Attea - 2006-11-24
We all know the story of the rube who gets sucked into a game of Three-Card Monte on Fifth Avenue and watches his bets disappear in the pockets of the quick-handed sharpie at the folding card table. A...
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by Tom Attea - 2006-11-24
With a surprising salvo of bravado, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has asked the provocative question, "Does Iran have a right to exist?"In the startling speech, he warned Western nations, espe...
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by Tom Attea - 2006-11-24
In case you haven't heard, there is a brash new movement afoot to make America a nonaligned nation. The principal motivation behind the movement is worldwide ingratitude for the sacrifices America has...
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by Tom Attea - 2006-11-24
It appears, scandalously enough, to be the question Islamic terrorism foists on us. Of course, there are times when a chancy question can diplomatically be allowed to slip by unanswered, especially by...
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by Tom Attea - 2006-11-24
After decades of refusing to admit that Palestine has a legitimate right to exist, Israel inched toward possible approval of the idea it has opposed as part of its militantly anti-Palestine platform. ...
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by Tom Attea - 2006-11-24
In a world caught up in effects, with scant attention being paid to causes, we find that France - which has, in the understatement of the current issue, abstained from a full-throttle commitment to th...
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by Deanna Mascle - 2006-11-21
Questions:1. One of the world's oldest cultivated vegetables, this member of the lily family was considered sacred by ancient Egyptians, as valuable as gold in the Middle Ages, and a vital food for ma...
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by Deanna Mascle - 2006-11-21
Question: Which country is the oldest on earth?Answers: San MarinoTrivia Teaser: According to tradition, San Marino is known as the world's oldest republic. The tiny republic was founded by a Christia...