“From the beginning We know that Kokusz is not an ordinary fox… despite of the lot hardships and tributes He is the happiest fox I have ever met❤️ He is the dash of color in our everydays🙏🏼 Let’s listen 😍“
grow all you can eat in three square feet - DK veg in one bed by Huw Richard allotment month by month by Alan Buckingham RHS grow your own crops in pots mini farming: self sufficiency on ¼ acre by Brett Markham the edible garden by Alys Fowler food not lawns: how to turn your yard into a garden and your neighborhood into a community by Heather Jo Flores RHS the urban gardener RHS little book of small space gardening RHS growing vegetables and herbs a gardeners guide to surviving brexit by Unconventional Emma - dropbox link the vegan book of permaculture by Graham Burnett Gaia’s garden: a guide to home scale permaculture by Tony Hemenway
Dubbed the “Requiem for Ash Edition,” Campbell shares new anecdotes since the hardcover publication in 2017, including his retirement from playing Ash from the Evil Dead franchise and details from his book tour.
Campbell co-wrote the
New York Times bestselling
autobiography with longtime friend and collaborator Craig Sanborn. Actor/humorist John Hodgman (The Daily Show) provides a foreword.
Hail to the Chin’s “Requiem for Ash Edition” is available for pre-order for $17.99 on Amazon. The synopsis is below.
Daniel Okrent on how Trump’s hard-line position on immigration echoes the anti-immigration and eugenicist sentiments of the early 1900s:
“I think that one could say that today’s Central Americans and today’s Muslims … are the equivalent of 1924’s Jews and Italians, or … the Jews and Italians then were treated and regarded as these Latin American and Muslim nationalities are today. When you choose your immigrants, when you choose your next door neighbors on the basis of their ethnicity or their race rather than the nature of the individual him- or herself, you’re engaged in, in this case, official legal discrimination.”
When Akiya Parks first got to campus at the University of Florida, everything was new and exciting. Her mom and brother had driven her to campus and moved her into the dorms, she’d agreed to try a long-distance relationship with her high school boyfriend, she was ready to start a new chapter in Gainesville.
This was a dream come true: No one in Parks’ family had ever gone to college before, and her good grades, volunteer work and commitment to her community had earned her a full-ride scholarship — nearly everything was paid for. She got a new laptop, she bonded with her roommate and she crafted her schedule.
But a few weeks into classes, she started feeling sick. At first, she thought college food just wasn’t sitting well, but it wasn’t the food.
She was pregnant.
“I went back to my dorm, crying. Devastated,” Parks recalls. “I didn’t know how college worked. Do they kick out pregnant people? I just didn’t know any of the answers to my questions.”
The question on everyone’s mind — especially Parks — was, would she say in school? Could you go to class and raise a child?
Synchrophasotron control center, Dubna, Russia, 1968.
The Synchrophasotron was a synchrotron-based particle accelerator for protons at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research that was operational from 1957 to 2003. Source
This blog is mostly so I can vent my feelings and share my interests. Other than that, I am nothing special.
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