In another thread, someone wrote: Ah, Goldie Hawn in a bikini, doing the dumb blonde act. I was in love with her as a little boy... (Dropping out of third person for ease of writing.) I spend a lot of time fulfilling some contracts in Houston, Texas, USA. I have met a lot of men "of a certain age" who grew up in Houston or the surrounding area in the late fifties / early sixties
Mail received on spamtrap. This spamtrap mail has been redacted, the mail was not really sent to <Ardith663@users.spamikaze.org>. URLs have been stripped of the parts before and after the host name. From jr@jrtr.org Mon Nov 05 21:30:30 2007 Return-path: <jr@jrtr.org> Received: from [mail.victim.example] (helo=humbolt.mail.victim.example) by shelob.surriel.com with esmtp (Exim 4.63) (envelope
Frances Kemmish wrote: [...] I also remember going to the movies with my cousins, and seeing films with Dutch subtitles. The only films I recall specifically were from the 1960s: "A Hard Day's Night", and "Blowup"". Neither my cousin, reading the subtitles, nor I, hearing the original soundtrack, understood what "Blowup" was about.[1] [...] I remember one of my cousins who spoke
On 25 Aug 2007 07:47:56 GMT, MI5Victim@mi5.gov.uk wrote: BBC-TV "See You, See Me" - 7/Dec/2001 Certainty level: 80%% On Friday 7 December 2001, BBC Schools aired a TV programme from their "See You, See Me" series. The series was based in Scotland, with Grant Stott and Wilma Kennedy trying to find some stolen jewels. Its web home is www.bbc.co.uk/scotland/education/seeyouseeme/
FlatIronMike wrote: Thanks for sharing this with us Steve. I think it's amazing how other places view violence which we Amurikans seem to feel is our birthright. I think the fact that I can wake up and see violence on TV within a minute is a sorry state of our values here. Just imagine how quickly it would stop if they actually showed 'real' violence. A blood pool two yards wide