dandy_warhol
Cyburbian
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That's totally not something a hostage would say.
Blink twice if you need us to rescue you.
Squee? I think it's safe to say the dormouse was summarily executed by its own actions.
So, the Frankfurt airport shuts down at night?
Yup. They roll up the sidewalks and everything.So, the Frankfurt airport shuts down at night?
We are living in a dream, actually.So I usually nap on the sofa but yesterday I laid down on my bed after getting home from work. I woke up a 9:00 and thought I was late for work, but it was dark out. I was really confused, then I realized I still had my clothes on and remembered I only took a nap. So I went back to sleep and woke up when my alarm went off this morning. I guess I needed the sleep.
It's all one big simulation.We are living in a dream, actually.
DI agree with that and acknowledgment that I do it as w
Is it possible she already paid for it at the register and had a receipt in her purse, like they do with bags of salt and other bulky items they keep out front?
A friend knew a detective whose job was to follow what are called "runners", those that load shopping carts and rush out the door without paying. The big box legal advice is never to chase a runner, due to liability. The detective follows a runner and tries to get a tag number, but beyond that, they just let it go and write off a loss if they can.While working a summer job at Walmart I saw an old lady grab a geranium off an outdoor display and hop into her car with her elderly husband as the getaway driver.berv
Only you are the real thing which fact is loaded with pluses and minuses.It's all one big simulation.
Fun fact, despite Grace Slick's testimony in verse, the dormouse in Wonderland never told anyone to "feed your head". That quote is etched on the zippo lighter of a Vietnam vet I know who came home strung out on heroin
Oh the shoplifter stories I can tell. I could tell whether someone coming through the door was there to shop, shoplift, or buy drugs from Mark in produce.D
A friend knew a detective whose job was to follow what are called "runners", those that load shopping carts and rush out the door without paying. The big box legal advice is never to chase a runner, due to liability. The detective follows a runner and tries to get a tag number, but beyond that, they just let it go and write off a loss if they can.
We have a local grocer that does chase runners, different lawyers. A regional grocer that puts his employees at that risk of chasing runners. Very conservative. Have written about them before...they routinely build new store space, usually adjacent, and then abandon the old. They surely get some kind of big write-off.Oh the shoplifter stories I can tell. I could tell whether someone coming through the door was there to shop, shoplift, or buy drugs from Mark in produce.
Yep. And our local international airport won't allow flights to land after midnight. We got stuck for an extra night in Sardinia when our flight kept getting delayed and then wasn't allowed to take off because it was too late.So, the Frankfurt airport shuts down at night?
So, the Frankfurt airport shuts down at night?
When my wife worked at a women's clothing store in a mall, a woman put a bunch of clothes and tied them around her body under her very large dress. My wife realized what happened and as the woman moved toward the door my wife yelled, "STOP!" The woman ran out of the store with my wife chasing her and darted into a Wendy's. She went in and didn't see her, checked the restroom, no one there. She told a guy behind the counter and he checked the men's room and there she was. She ran past him out the door to the mall. Wendy's guy chased her down and grabber her buy her ponytail and wrestled her down. They got her back to my wife's store and called the police (mall security was useless). When they got there and ID'ed the woman, the police told her that she was wanted in several states and had an FBI bulletin out on her; that she was considered "armed and dangerous." They told her don't ever chase a shoplifter again.A friend knew a detective whose job was to follow what are called "runners", those that load shopping carts and rush out the door without paying. The big box legal advice is never to chase a runner, due to liability. The detective follows a runner and tries to get a tag number, but beyond that, they just let it go and write off a loss if they can.
And this is why I will die before my time. If I see somebody rolling out of Home Depot with a cart full of tools and they tell them to stop and they don't I'm probably grabbing/tackling them. It's just my nature, I simply cannot stand by and let something like that happen without trying to help. Hell, in a lot of cities now the police won't even go after or prosecute thieves. And yet some people wonder why pharmacies and other stores are closing in certain areas.When my wife worked at a women's clothing store in a mall, a woman put a bunch of clothes and tied them around her body under her very large dress. My wife realized what happened and as the woman moved toward the door my wife yelled, "STOP!" The woman ran out of the store with my wife chasing her and darted into a Wendy's. She went in and didn't see her, checked the restroom, no one there. She told a guy behind the counter and he checked the men's room and there she was. She ran past him out the door to the mall. Wendy's guy chased her down and grabber her buy her ponytail and wrestled her down. They got her back to my wife's store and called the police (mall security was useless). When they got there and ID'ed the woman, the police told her that she was wanted in several states and had an FBI bulletin out on her; that she was considered "armed and dangerous." They told her don't ever chase a shoplifter again.
What pissed me off about the Virginia City incident--right up the street from me and where I go for our Planning Commission meetings--is not so much the horrible racist comments themselves by a VISITOR to the community, but the fact that no locals stepped in and told the a**hole where to go. That's what makes our community look bad. :-(And this is why I will die before my time. If I see somebody rolling out of Home Depot with a cart full of tools and they tell them to stop and they don't I'm probably grabbing/tackling them. It's just my nature, I simply cannot stand by and let something like that happen without trying to help. Hell, in a lot of cities now the police won't even go after or prosecute thieves. And yet some people wonder why pharmacies and other stores are closing in certain areas.
It looks like you are writing a letter. Do you need help?I hate MS Word. There, I said it.
It has been way busier of a position, but it has been super cool. Next week I start in on some of the Economic Development stuff too.That's totally not something a hostage would say.
Blink twice if you need us to rescue you.
I still miss Word PerfectI hate MS Word. There, I said it.
Gotta love punching out that paper keyboard overlay with all the shortcuts on it.I still miss Word Perfect
I do too. Local product for me.I still miss Word Perfect
I found that in the last city I worked.The legal profession still makes extensive use Word Perfect as the preferred word processing program.
Google Docs only redeeming qualities are that it tries to mimic Word and it's free.I will complain heartedly about Microsoft Word but I like it better than Google docs
I like that it can auto-format links to the title of the linked article.Google Docs only redeeming qualities are that it tries to mimic Word and it's free.
I remember the first time departing John Wayne the pilot announcing "hold on to your lilly white butts"John Wayne Airport in Orange County, California, has a curfew where flights are not allowed to occur during the night (except if there is a flight emergency that requires a plane to land). It also has very short runways, and to avoid noise impacts to the very wealthy OC cities, requires planes to spool up their engines to full power before moving on the runway, hit a hard incline to quickly get above the ground, then drop power and turn, making for one exciting takeoff. There is actually sound meters nearby that, if exceeded, will result in a fine to the airline.
The legal profession also had a cow when I threw out our fax machine.I do too. Local product for me.
I found that in the last city I worked.
My father was an aviation electrician in the Navy during the late 1950s - his description of taking off from Guantanamo Bay was pretty harrowing (at the time it was apparently a short-ish runway that ended at the edge of a cliff). Watching planes take off from Regan National and make a sharp banking turn early in their accent to avoid hitting the Washington Monument is also fun.John Wayne Airport in Orange County, California, has a curfew where flights are not allowed to occur during the night (except if there is a flight emergency that requires a plane to land). It also has very short runways, and to avoid noise impacts to the very wealthy OC cities, requires planes to spool up their engines to full power before moving on the runway, hit a hard incline to quickly get above the ground, then drop power and turn, making for one exciting takeoff. [/URL]
Thankfully most office copiers now have this ability. Don't recall when I last used a stand-alone fax machine. But I do recall early use when the paper was curled up since it came off a roll.The legal profession also had a cow when I threw out our fax machine.
I have tried to avoid MS by only using Open Office. It is free but nowhere near as user adapted.I hate MS Word. There, I said it.
We have many facsimile-era files with old faxes in them. The ink has not aged well and many are barely legible. We try to copy them whenever we find them as a preservation effort, but I fear we will lose many because we have no comprehensive record of them in our files. No doubt, some will be important documents ...<snip> But I do recall early use when the paper was curled up since it came off a roll.
I've flown from National (erm sorry, Reagan) a ton over the years as it was one of the 3 airports that was equidistant for me (BWI, DCA, and IAD). Anywho, it has always been tight but after 9/11 it got even tighter with more restricted airspace. There's been times I thought I was in a Blue Angels show we were rolling around so much!My father was an aviation electrician in the Navy during the late 1950s - his description of taking off from Guantanamo Bay was pretty harrowing (at the time it was apparently a short-ish runway that ended at the edge of a cliff). Watching planes take off from Regan National and make a sharp banking turn early in their accent to avoid hitting the Washington Monument is also fun.
Personally, I was a big fan of Nota Bene back in the 80's and early 90's. Long defunct AFAIK. Like all programs of its era, it came on about 4-5 floppies, and its documentation came in a binder.The legal profession still makes extensive use Word Perfect as the preferred word processing program.
At our house, we have a printer/copier/scanner/fax. I use the first two features regularly, the third occasionally, but haven't used the third since . . . I don't know when. I doubt I can, now, since we finally dropped our landline earlier this year.Thankfully most office copiers now have this ability. Don't recall when I last used a stand-alone fax machine. But I do recall early use when the paper was curled up since it came off a roll.