Our original blog "Politics, Culture and Other Wastes of Time," which is still up and existent http://www.politicscultureandotherwastesoft.blogspot.com
....will be turning ten years old on Sept. 21t. So to honor the occasion, we are posting 10 entries on both blogs commemorating the anniversary.
We start here with a round-up of the nine countries outside the United States where "The Daily Vampire" has had the highest number of hits from. We do want to take a moment to recognize people from smaller nations, such as El Salvador, Gabon, and Laos, where we have seen hits from over the years. But, as one would expect larger countries are in the top nine. We have been stunned by how popular both blogs are in Russia and Ukraine, and we are grateful that Turkey, the country of my late father, is in the top nine for this blog.
The images we have chosen to represent three of the countries on the list are of Misha the Bear (or Mishka) who was the mascot of the 1980 Moscow Summer Olympics, Karagoz and Hacivat, two beloved Turkish shadow puppets which have been in existence since Ottoman times, and a still from Federico Fellini's 1969 film "Satyrican" for Italy (alas, the Italian director's name is one we have frequently spelled incorrectly!)
While we are at it, let's take a moment to salute Italian female tennis player Flavia Pennetta for winning today's U.S. Open finale.
Here are the countries and the number of hits from each one:
1. Russia 29,585
2. United Kingdom 27,223
3. Canada 17, 098
4. Germany 15,121
5. France 7,495
6. Australia 7,256
7. *Turkey 2,586
8. Ukraine 2,493
9. Italy 2,371
Showing posts with label El Salvador. Show all posts
Showing posts with label El Salvador. Show all posts
Saturday, September 12, 2015
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Our Sunday Comics Survey from "The Washington Post:" Two Perfekt Strips
Greetings to our blog readers in Bulgaria, Chile and El Salvador..........
Today, we survey our top ten favorite comic strips from the Sunday, Feb. 8th edition of "The Washington Post," for our top ten favorites from the Feb.1st edition of 'The Post,' go to our sister blog: http://www.politicscultureandotherwastesoft.blogspot.com
Among the comic strips in our top ten are two strips that we gave perfect 10s too (ice skater Ashley Wagner would be sooo proud), they are "Lio" and "Brewster Rockit," but on a coin flip, we went with "Lio," which features a Felix the Cat (pictured top) nod, in addition to six other comic strips felines, including (of course) Garfield (Bill Murray would be proud) and Krazy Kat from way, way back in the day......
The Danish import "WuMo" came in a close third with a brilliant strip about the food chain of the piranha (cent. image is of the cult classic 1978 film "Piranha"), and in ninth place, "Rhymes with Orange," which is also carried by "The Martinsville Bullletin" in Martinsville, Va., featured a rat who finally figured out a way to get out of a maze.
Lastly, we salute our day sponsors, including the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta, Ga., and Arena Stage in Washington, DC, now staging the late August Wilson's theatrical gem "King Hedley II." Well, ok, so we don't anyone associated with either entity (we just like making fun of local NPR stations, they won't get this in El Salvador, will they?!)....
Here is our top ten:
1) Lio
2) Brewster Rockit
3) WuMo
4) The Argyle Sweater
5) Prickly City (highest rating for strip)
6) Sherman's Lagoon
7) Foxtrot
8) Baldo
9) Rhymes with Orange
10) Pearls Before Swine
http://www.martinsvillebulletin.com
http://www.visitmartinsville.com
http://www.georgiaaquarium.com
http://www.arenastage.org
Today, we survey our top ten favorite comic strips from the Sunday, Feb. 8th edition of "The Washington Post," for our top ten favorites from the Feb.1st edition of 'The Post,' go to our sister blog: http://www.politicscultureandotherwastesoft.blogspot.com
Among the comic strips in our top ten are two strips that we gave perfect 10s too (ice skater Ashley Wagner would be sooo proud), they are "Lio" and "Brewster Rockit," but on a coin flip, we went with "Lio," which features a Felix the Cat (pictured top) nod, in addition to six other comic strips felines, including (of course) Garfield (Bill Murray would be proud) and Krazy Kat from way, way back in the day......
The Danish import "WuMo" came in a close third with a brilliant strip about the food chain of the piranha (cent. image is of the cult classic 1978 film "Piranha"), and in ninth place, "Rhymes with Orange," which is also carried by "The Martinsville Bullletin" in Martinsville, Va., featured a rat who finally figured out a way to get out of a maze.
Lastly, we salute our day sponsors, including the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta, Ga., and Arena Stage in Washington, DC, now staging the late August Wilson's theatrical gem "King Hedley II." Well, ok, so we don't anyone associated with either entity (we just like making fun of local NPR stations, they won't get this in El Salvador, will they?!)....
Here is our top ten:
1) Lio
2) Brewster Rockit
3) WuMo
4) The Argyle Sweater
5) Prickly City (highest rating for strip)
6) Sherman's Lagoon
7) Foxtrot
8) Baldo
9) Rhymes with Orange
10) Pearls Before Swine
http://www.martinsvillebulletin.com
http://www.visitmartinsville.com
http://www.georgiaaquarium.com
http://www.arenastage.org
Labels:
Arena Stage,
Ashley Wagner,
Bill Murray,
Brewster Rockit: Space Guy,
Bulgaria,
Chile,
cult movies,
El Salvador,
Felix the Cat,
Garfield,
Georgia Aquarium,
Lio,
Martinsville,
Rhymes with Orange,
WUMO
Sunday, January 19, 2014
Top Ten Comics from Today's Sunday Roanoke Times: Speed Bump Stands Out
Greetings to our blog-readers in Canada, El Salvador and Brazil.
Today, we once again take a look at the Sunday funnies in "The Roanoke Times," a daily newspaper in Roanoke, Va.
We also survey the comic strips in the Washington Post: http://www.politicscultureandotherwastesoft.blogspot.com
Our personal favorite comic strip of the day that was in neither newspaper is "The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee:" http://edisonleecomic.com/ ..........
Other strips that we saw today online that we really enjoy include "Retail," "Pros and Cons" and "Bleeker." We actually also contemplated stating what our least favorite strip of the day was, but we gather we aren't the only ones who quit laughing at "The Family Circus" and "For Better or for Worse" a long time.
Our favorite "Roanoke Times" comic strip "Speed Bump" had a hilarious gag with two octopi/octopuses, while "Pearls Before Swine" showed bambis getting revenge on hunters and "Get Fuzzy" focused on a play on words as Bucky the whacky Siamese cat argues with his owner Rob Wilco on the differences between the words 'coop' and 'coup.
Here is our top ten:
1. Speed Bump
2. Pearls Before Swine
3. Get Fuzzy
4. Agnes
5. Doonesbury
6. Zits
7. Funky Winkerbean
8. Dilbert
9. Garfield
10. Jump Start
http://www.gocomics.com/speedbump#.UtxncTYo6Uk
http://stephanpastis.wordpress.com/
Today, we once again take a look at the Sunday funnies in "The Roanoke Times," a daily newspaper in Roanoke, Va.
We also survey the comic strips in the Washington Post: http://www.politicscultureandotherwastesoft.blogspot.com
Our personal favorite comic strip of the day that was in neither newspaper is "The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee:" http://edisonleecomic.com/ ..........
Other strips that we saw today online that we really enjoy include "Retail," "Pros and Cons" and "Bleeker." We actually also contemplated stating what our least favorite strip of the day was, but we gather we aren't the only ones who quit laughing at "The Family Circus" and "For Better or for Worse" a long time.
Our favorite "Roanoke Times" comic strip "Speed Bump" had a hilarious gag with two octopi/octopuses, while "Pearls Before Swine" showed bambis getting revenge on hunters and "Get Fuzzy" focused on a play on words as Bucky the whacky Siamese cat argues with his owner Rob Wilco on the differences between the words 'coop' and 'coup.
Here is our top ten:
1. Speed Bump
2. Pearls Before Swine
3. Get Fuzzy
4. Agnes
5. Doonesbury
6. Zits
7. Funky Winkerbean
8. Dilbert
9. Garfield
10. Jump Start
http://www.gocomics.com/speedbump#.UtxncTYo6Uk
http://stephanpastis.wordpress.com/
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Quote from Che Guevara: Little Thinkers (2 of 16)
Greetings to our blog-readers in El Salvador, Estonia and Egypt.
Since the Myrtle Beach Tea Party in Myrtle Beach, SC, thinks all of us Democrats, even those of us on the center-left are Marxists, socialists, perhaps there is little harm in posting a comment from Che Guevara, the Latin American revolutionist who was assassinated/executed in Bolivia at the age of 40 in 1967.
Guevara was a leading figure in the Cuban Revolution which brought Fidel Castro to power, which makes us think it would be very ironic to see someone sporting a Che Guevara t-shirt at the Greensboro Gun Show, which is happening on the weekend of Feb. 1st and 2nd at the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, NC.
We are also quoting Che as he is one of the many historical figures which have been made into Little Thinkers puppet/dolls (seen above).
Here is his quote:
"I don't care if I fall as long as someone else picks up my gun and keeps on shooting."
SIDEBAR: We learned by chance yesterday that the heavy metal Judas Priest is starting their European tour in Katowice, Poland, on April 14th. Perhaps, someone from Chicago or St.Louis may actually get on an Air Poland flight and head out there just for the show!
http://www.marxists.org
http://www.cheguevara.com
http://www.visitbolivia.org
http://www.mbteaparty.org
http://www.greensborogunshow.com
http://www.judaspriest.com
Since the Myrtle Beach Tea Party in Myrtle Beach, SC, thinks all of us Democrats, even those of us on the center-left are Marxists, socialists, perhaps there is little harm in posting a comment from Che Guevara, the Latin American revolutionist who was assassinated/executed in Bolivia at the age of 40 in 1967.
Guevara was a leading figure in the Cuban Revolution which brought Fidel Castro to power, which makes us think it would be very ironic to see someone sporting a Che Guevara t-shirt at the Greensboro Gun Show, which is happening on the weekend of Feb. 1st and 2nd at the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, NC.
We are also quoting Che as he is one of the many historical figures which have been made into Little Thinkers puppet/dolls (seen above).
Here is his quote:
"I don't care if I fall as long as someone else picks up my gun and keeps on shooting."
SIDEBAR: We learned by chance yesterday that the heavy metal Judas Priest is starting their European tour in Katowice, Poland, on April 14th. Perhaps, someone from Chicago or St.Louis may actually get on an Air Poland flight and head out there just for the show!
http://www.marxists.org
http://www.cheguevara.com
http://www.visitbolivia.org
http://www.mbteaparty.org
http://www.greensborogunshow.com
http://www.judaspriest.com
Thursday, October 10, 2013
DC Week (1 of 8): A Quote from George Washington
We start DC Week with a simple entry featuring a quote from America's first president George Washington. Of course, thanks to the likes of Cong. Eric Cantor (R-Va., forgive the editorial commentary), the Washington Memorial is closed as are all national parks in Washington, DC, and around the nation.
One fiasco that the shut down caused was the scheduled cross-country journey of a Tyrannosaurs Rex skeleton belonging to a 67 million-year-old dinosaur, whose name is Wankel T-Rex, from Montana to the nation's capital where it was to be displayed at the Smithsonian Natural Museum of Natural History.
Oh well................
As for Washington, his face is on our one dollar bills (I suppose those of you in El Salvador, Moldova and Zimbabwe already knew that) and if one is to find a one-dollar bill at the Beach Bum Café in Honolulu, Hawaii, you can see where it originated_ perhaps it originated at a gas station in Passaic, NJ.
Here is our quote from the first prez:
"Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism."
Oh, and we should add that there is a high school in Danville, Va., named for GW.
http://www.gwmemorial.org
http://www.mountvernon.org
http://www.wheresgeorge.com
http://www.beachbumcafe.com
http://www.danville-va.gov/
One fiasco that the shut down caused was the scheduled cross-country journey of a Tyrannosaurs Rex skeleton belonging to a 67 million-year-old dinosaur, whose name is Wankel T-Rex, from Montana to the nation's capital where it was to be displayed at the Smithsonian Natural Museum of Natural History.
Oh well................
As for Washington, his face is on our one dollar bills (I suppose those of you in El Salvador, Moldova and Zimbabwe already knew that) and if one is to find a one-dollar bill at the Beach Bum Café in Honolulu, Hawaii, you can see where it originated_ perhaps it originated at a gas station in Passaic, NJ.
Here is our quote from the first prez:
"Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism."
Oh, and we should add that there is a high school in Danville, Va., named for GW.
http://www.gwmemorial.org
http://www.mountvernon.org
http://www.wheresgeorge.com
http://www.beachbumcafe.com
http://www.danville-va.gov/
Monday, September 23, 2013
Image to Fill Space: A Pug
Greetings to our blog-readers in Canada, El Salvador, Venezuela, Sweden, Slovakia, Saudi Arabia, Cyprus, Ghana, Malaysia, Tajikistan and The Bahamas.
We'll have something more substantial in tomorrow's blog entry.
We'll have something more substantial in tomorrow's blog entry.
Labels:
Canada,
Cyprus,
dogs,
El Salvador,
Ghana,
house pets,
Malaysia,
pug,
Saudi Arabia,
Slovakia,
Sweden,
Tajikistan,
The Bahamas,
Venezuela
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Highlights from The Bucket List: Going to Seattle Anyone?
Yes, even though I'm only 43 years old, I actually made a bucket list of 100 things to do before I die. Some things are a bit more idealistic; some things are a bit more practical.
With that, I want to send special greetings to our blog-readers in Russia, China and Japan as well as those of you in smaller countries like Malta and El Salvador.
Here are some of the highlights:
1. Take a Greyhound bus trip from Burlington, NC, to Seattle.
2. Go to Iceland, and take some photos of the volcanoes while you are there.
3. Watch "Breaking Bad" on dvd in its entirety (I have yet to see a single show of the series which concludes this weekend).
4. Write an article for "Mental Floss."
5. Wake up at 6 a.m. for six days in a row?! (I'm a night person)
6. Take a Varan bus trip (Varan is a Turkish bus line) from Istanbul to Van
7. Date a woman 20 years younger than you
8. Date a woman 20 years older than you
9. Visit the National Zoo in Washington, DC, take lots of photos of the pandas
10. Volunteer at a homeless shelter
http://www.greyhound.com
http://www.visiticeland.com
http://www.turkey.org
http://www.mentalfloss.com
http://www.washington.org
http://www.homelessshetlerdirectory.org
With that, I want to send special greetings to our blog-readers in Russia, China and Japan as well as those of you in smaller countries like Malta and El Salvador.
Here are some of the highlights:
1. Take a Greyhound bus trip from Burlington, NC, to Seattle.
2. Go to Iceland, and take some photos of the volcanoes while you are there.
3. Watch "Breaking Bad" on dvd in its entirety (I have yet to see a single show of the series which concludes this weekend).
4. Write an article for "Mental Floss."
5. Wake up at 6 a.m. for six days in a row?! (I'm a night person)
6. Take a Varan bus trip (Varan is a Turkish bus line) from Istanbul to Van
7. Date a woman 20 years younger than you
8. Date a woman 20 years older than you
9. Visit the National Zoo in Washington, DC, take lots of photos of the pandas
10. Volunteer at a homeless shelter
http://www.greyhound.com
http://www.visiticeland.com
http://www.turkey.org
http://www.mentalfloss.com
http://www.washington.org
http://www.homelessshetlerdirectory.org
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Things We Learned on Bing Today: KLM (Royal Dutch Airlines) Founded in 1919
Since we are a bit pressed for time today and we want to find out new information on the latest round of police crackdowns against protestors in Istanbul, Turkey, stemming from the government's decision to graze historic, scenic Gezi Park in Taksim Square, we are going to return to an old stand-by.
For these segments, we ask a major search engine a general question. Today, it was: "When was KLM founded?"
As it turns out, the Dutch carrier happens to be the world's oldest airline operating under its own name. KLM (Royal Dutch Airlines) was founded in 1919; the major hub of the airline is Shiphol Airport in Amsterdam.
KLM has 136 destinations around the globe. It merged with Air France in 2004, and the Dutch airline is also a member of the SkyTeam Alliance.
Perhaps, it's time to go back and visit Amsterdam, we we did in 1993 to revisit the Vincent Van Gogh Museum!
The Netherlands is also one of the countries in which the blog receives the most amount of hits, though per capita, we think either Latvia or El Salvador might be the two countries in which we are most popular...........perhaps?!
http://www.klm.com
http://www.rnw.nl/
For these segments, we ask a major search engine a general question. Today, it was: "When was KLM founded?"
As it turns out, the Dutch carrier happens to be the world's oldest airline operating under its own name. KLM (Royal Dutch Airlines) was founded in 1919; the major hub of the airline is Shiphol Airport in Amsterdam.
KLM has 136 destinations around the globe. It merged with Air France in 2004, and the Dutch airline is also a member of the SkyTeam Alliance.
Perhaps, it's time to go back and visit Amsterdam, we we did in 1993 to revisit the Vincent Van Gogh Museum!
The Netherlands is also one of the countries in which the blog receives the most amount of hits, though per capita, we think either Latvia or El Salvador might be the two countries in which we are most popular...........perhaps?!
http://www.klm.com
http://www.rnw.nl/
Labels:
Air France,
airlines,
airports,
Amsterdan,
Bing (search engine),
El Salvador,
Gezi Park,
Holland,
Istanbul,
KLM,
Latvia,
Radio Netherlands,
Taksim,
The Netherlands,
Turkey,
Vincent van Gogh
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Tilly Gokbudak is NOT Moving to Bulgaria (It was an April Fool's Prank)
For those of you in El Salvador, Dubai and Sri Lanka who read this blog on a daily basis, it is time to fully fess up. Though the American College of Sofia in the Bulgarian capital of Sofia is a real place, I have not accepted a job as an English teacher there. In fact, I have not been to Bulgaria since our family traveled through there en route from Belgrade, Serbia (it was the capital of Yugoslavia then) to Istanbul, Turkey, when I was a child in the 1970s.
We also need to add a correction to yesterday's piece as the national airlines of Bulgaria is actually called Balkan Bulgarian Airlines; perhaps they can find you a flight from JFK or Dulles to Sofia or Varna (another Bulgarian city).
Approximately 11-14 people fell for my prank yesterday, but it is nothing compared to what my good friend and fellow blogger Chris Knight of Reidsville, NC, did for April Fool's Day of 2009.
For that prank, Knight convinced people all over the globe that a radical minister named the Rev. Johnny Robertson from the Church of Christ in Martinsville, Va., created an unholy scene in Vatican City, of all places!
Here is a sample of that entry (we will post a link bellow):
"Johnny Robertson has been arrested in Vatican City following what is being called a 'coordinated and persistent' attempt to threaten Pope Benedict XVI within the very Papal Apartments of the Apostolic Palace."
Knight said in a April 9, 2009, entry that he received messages from both the State Department and Vatican City expressing concern about the 'incident.'
http://theknightshift.blogspot.com/2009/04/breaking-hard-johnny-robertson-arrested.html
http://www.theknightshift.blogspot.com
http://www.air.bg/en (Balkan Bulgarian Airlines)
http://www.acs.bg (American College of Sofia)
http://www.bulgaria_embassy.org (Bulgarian Embassy in Washington, DC)
http://www.allaboutclowns.com
We also need to add a correction to yesterday's piece as the national airlines of Bulgaria is actually called Balkan Bulgarian Airlines; perhaps they can find you a flight from JFK or Dulles to Sofia or Varna (another Bulgarian city).
Approximately 11-14 people fell for my prank yesterday, but it is nothing compared to what my good friend and fellow blogger Chris Knight of Reidsville, NC, did for April Fool's Day of 2009.
For that prank, Knight convinced people all over the globe that a radical minister named the Rev. Johnny Robertson from the Church of Christ in Martinsville, Va., created an unholy scene in Vatican City, of all places!
Here is a sample of that entry (we will post a link bellow):
"Johnny Robertson has been arrested in Vatican City following what is being called a 'coordinated and persistent' attempt to threaten Pope Benedict XVI within the very Papal Apartments of the Apostolic Palace."
Knight said in a April 9, 2009, entry that he received messages from both the State Department and Vatican City expressing concern about the 'incident.'
http://theknightshift.blogspot.com/2009/04/breaking-hard-johnny-robertson-arrested.html
http://www.theknightshift.blogspot.com
http://www.air.bg/en (Balkan Bulgarian Airlines)
http://www.acs.bg (American College of Sofia)
http://www.bulgaria_embassy.org (Bulgarian Embassy in Washington, DC)
http://www.allaboutclowns.com
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Parade of Nations (two of four)- Canada to Jamaica
With continue with the parade of nations and their respective flag-bearers, starting with our neighbors to the north Canada, and then continuing in alphabetical order; there are additional entries on our sister blog "Politics, Culture and Other Wastes of Time" as well:
Canada: Simon Whitfield (pictured above, triathlon)
Armenia: Arma Yeremyan (men's taekwondo)
Brazil: Rodrigo Pessoa (men's equestrian)
Croatia: Venio Losert (pictured below, men's handball)
El Salvador: Evelyn Garcia (women's cycling)
Iceland: Asdis Hjalmsdottir (women's track and field/javelin)
Iraq: Dana Hussain (pictured middle, women's track and field)
Jamaica: Usain Bolt (men's track and field)
http://www.london2012.com
http://www.nbcolympics.com
http://www.politicscultureandotherwastesoft.blogspot.com
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Ten Years Later- September 11th (Part 2 of 2)

The scope of what happened ten years ago is quite garganutuan in nature, and there is no conceivable way to cover all the victims of Sept. 11th, not in "The New York Times," not in "The Washington Post," and certainly not on this blog.
One story I wanted to cover was one of the El Salvadoran immigrants who were working at The Window of the Worlds Cafe in the North Tower. By percentage of its population, El Salvador had the highest casualty rate from the September 11th attacks.
At the time, I also read a moving story about a Pakistani immigrant firefigther who was working for the FCDY, who went into the remnants of the Twin Towers to help save lives. He talked about how he was so unsettled at the thought a member of his Muslim faith had performed this heinous action as an act of faith that he was almost unable to concentrate effectively and do his job. In total, 343 firefighters died on Sept. 11th, and many more died from lung disease in the ensuing years due to the smoke inhalation at Ground Zero.
But, in addition to the story of Mari-Rae Soppard, who was going to be the women's gymnastics coach at UC-Santa Barbara which we covered on Friday on our other blog (www.politicscultureandotherwastesoft.blogspot.com), we are going to discuss three of the victims of 9-11 here.
Donald Greene was 52 when he died on September 11th. He was traveling on Flight 97 which crashed in Shanksille, Pa., and later became the basis for a critically-accalimed film "Uinted 97." Greene was a resident of Grenwich, Conn., and he left behind a wife and two children.
According to one memorial site, Greene emphaisized eating together as a family every night, and he coached children's soccer in his spare time.
His sister Terry Anne Greene of Massachussetts is an active member of the group September 11th Families for a Peaceful Tomorrow, and he spoke against a state bill in 2007 that would have reinstated the death penalty in Massachussetts.
Zuhtu Ibis, of Clifton, NJ, was 25 when he died as a result of the attacks on the Twin Towers. Ibis, an immigrant from the Turkish village of Sari Yaprak (which means yellow leaf) near the central Anatolian city of Yozgat, was working on the 103rd floor that day. His death was widely covered in the Turkish media.
His brother Mehmet Ibis was also a New Jersey resident and he tried desperately to find his brother. As a result of feeling overwhelmed from the day's events, Mehmet parked his car outside the Hoboken train station which stood in clear view of Ground Zero. In the process, Mehmet fell asleep. Some police officers knocked on his window as they questioned what he was doing. When it was realized that he was a Turkish person, the FBI and search dogs came in, and Mehmet was even arrested. The police officers, to their credit, apologized for the incident, but in a 2006 interview Mehmet Ibis said he was still angry about the way he had been treated.
Stephen Mulderry, 33, an equity trader, worked 14 floors beneath Zuhtu Ibis on the
89th floor of the World Trade Center. He would say goodbye to his family along with 30 co-workers in a conference call. One friend left the following message regarding Mulderry on a victims memorial page: "Will be thinking about you on Sunday. The world misses your smile."
Anne Mulderry told the public program "Interfaith Voices" that her Catholic faith has help guide her through the loss of her son. His mother also told his hometown newspaper "The Times-Union" in Albany, NY, that Stephen had just completed a deck over Labor Day where the whole family had gathered to spend the holiday weekend together.
Mulderry, who had since become a resident of New York City, was also the co-captain of his college basketball team at The University of Albany.
PERSONAL NOTE: Both part of this series and the conclusion of my two-part series on Amanda Rigg, a 22-year-old Australian tourist, who was killed during the Sept. 10, 2001, bombing in Istanbul, Tukey, by far-left militants that killed three people, are on my sister blog "Politics, Culture and Other Wastes of Time" (www.politicscultureandotherwastesoft.blogspot.com).
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Things We Learned on Twitter Today- Blue Shark Found in a River!
Zut alors! Wow! We are actually ahead in our blog entries as generally don't post this entry until Wednesday, which of course means we are neglecting vital aspects of our professional, social and personal lives, but we shall catch up even if it means hanging out at the Waffle House in Burlington, NC, (not where I actually am at the moment) until hmm.......4:35 a.m.!
Today, we learned from a tweet from "The Montreal Gazette" that a blue shark, a species which can grow up to 13-feet long, was captured in the St. Lawrence River in the Quebec province of Canada.
Fisherman who were trolling the river in the Gaspe region of Quebec found the blue shark sometime during daylight hours on Sunday.
The shark has been sent to the Exploramer Museum for further study.
Canadian blue sharks are more commonly found off the Atlantic Ocean of Nova Scotia.
Perhaps, the next time the San Jose Sharks of the NHL come to play the Montreal Canadiens, they can ask if the fish can become their mascot....?!
SIDEBAR: The Internationalist Book Store in Chapel Hill, NC, has a unique project which continues on Aug. 25 as they invite area residents and customers to gather in the store from 6:30-8:00 p.m. to send books to prisoners who are serving time in Alabama and Mississippi. Perhaps, "The Count of Monte Crisco" will be one of the titles! The establishment is also featuring the book "Resisting Reagan" by UNC sociology professor Christian Smith. The book details how some 100,000 Americans marched in the streets to protest Ronald Reagan's involvement in the wars which afflicted El Salvador and Nicaragua during his time in office.
Labels:
Alabama,
book stores,
Canada,
Chapel Hill,
El Salvador,
NC,
NHL,
Nicaragua,
Quebec,
Ronald Reagan,
sharks
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