The Internet is rising up in protest on February 11th

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

A second out of phase 017

JCCC facilities are part of Oct. 6 energy solutions tourMiss DARING DO, twitch like your biggest fan, Rainbow Dash
Source: Twilight Sparkle via Biggest Fan by *TwilightFlopple on deviantART
“Galileo’s Pavilion and the Solar Technologies Operations Module at JCCC are among the stops on the Heartland Renewable Energy Society’s 2012 Energy Solutions Tour set for 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 6.

The self-guided tour includes seven stops around the Kansas City metropolitan area. Tickets are $10, cash or check, with children 12 and younger admitted free.”
My sisters say that they will be attending the Kansas City Japan Festival. What if I told you... by my own admission, I will likely not be, the presence many from the Anime Club of JCCC notwithstanding?

Edwards is speaker for Oct. 5 Noon at the Nerman discussion program
This is another one of the Hyouka cosplay wins.
Source: Hyouka cos-play win. This is another one of the free posters
from the current NyanType. (J-List)
“Tai Edwards, assistant professor, history, is the speaker for Noon at the Nerman discussion program at noon Friday, Oct. 5

Edwards will discuss Aaron Morse’s “Pathfinder” (2004, acrylic on canvas, collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, 2005.19, gift of The Buddy Taub Foundation, Dennis Roach, director.)

Participants should meet at noon in the lobby of the Nerman Museum and will walk to the artwork from there.

Noon at the Nerman is a weekly interdisciplinary program examining works of art on view at the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art or on campus. Students, staff and visitors will gather at the Atrium at noon on Fridays then walk to one of the artworks on campus or in the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art to hear a JCCC faculty or staff member speak briefly on that work of art.

It’s free, and no reservations are required.

Interested in presenting? Contact Allison Smith, professor of art history.”
To look at sites of automotive companies, I first went on-line in December 1995, and in April 1996 I used Internet Explorer 1.0 on an IBM compatible in Windows 3.1 with Win32s, so for the last sixteen years I could frequently be found on-line. What were we expecting the future to be like?
The internet, according to Playboy magazine, in 1996
“Back in the mid-1990s, everyone was exceedingly jazzed about internet. In fact, everyone was so darn excited that it was impossible to leave the house without being smacked upside the head by such jargon as ‘electronic mail,’ ‘mouse,’ or ‘CD-ROM drive!’ And nobody was more enamored of the promise...”
Kitto I must write a disclaimer and to ask for one to prepare for a political segue, “And nobody has ever been more enamored of the supposed promise of this president than 90 Days, 90 Reasons.”
Romney Has Already Lost the Debate | Jeffrey Lord
“No matter what happens tomorrow night -- Barack Obama will be declared the winner of not only this debate but the two that follow.”
This afternoon, my destination will be 75th Street Brewery, where KC drinker says, “Bar food [is] taken to the next level,” and where Rachel in the bar area is always a truly excellent server, yet I will Wednesday skip Talk of the Town Grill & Bar and show my loyalty to the family of K.C. Hopps, Ltd. Restaurants & Breweries with another visit to Barley’s Brewhaus on 119th Street.

Fortunately, I will be too busy to Wednesday watch the debate; after the Club meeting, I will see my mother, and meet my friend Aaron at the Taco Bueno in Olathe, “There’s a political debate on. Change the channel.

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