Very nice. Great idea. I'd like to try that myself.
dpullum wrote:
Affinity is a good one $50 and has upgraded three times for free since I bought it 6 months ago.
Composition is key to good photography... it is based on human primitive brain response and is universal. Read bit-wise this free book.... Photographic Psychology: Image and Psyche
http://truecenterpublishing.com/photopsy/article_index.htmVery interesting and informative e-book. Thanks. I also use Affinity and find it to be a great and inexpensive editing program.
That a dozen years ago Donald Trump had a one-night stand with a porn star is about as shocking as a Department of Interior report that bears are currently using our national parklands as toilets.
Looks like one man exercising his 1st Amendment Rights and another man exercising his 2nd Amendment Rights.
In other words, give up the freedom to attend a public school. Give up the freedom to meet and associate with fellow classmates. Give up the opportunity to engage in intramural sports. And I’m sure one of the student’s working parents, or a single parent in many cases, will be more than happy to quit their job and stay home to monitor their student’s attendance and progress.
And when the high schools are all closed, some sick SOB will have only middle and elementary schools from which to choose. Maybe we should just close those schools too. Then no child ever goes to school.
What a simple-minded idea. Instead of addressing and solving the problem we’ll just change our lifestyle and behavior to conform to the dictates of some sicko.
BTW, your proposal violates the first principle of the NEA...”a great public school for every student.”
Post hoc, ergo propter hoc
But of course. An expired passport is not a valid passport anymore than an expired driver’s license is a valid driver’s license. If your passport expires while you’re abroad, how do you expect to return to the US without a valid passport?
That’s one heck of a mixed metaphor you have for a title...lol
Thank you. Let me know when you can.
Hi Suntouched. I am interested in purchasing the scanner as I still do a lot of film photography. If you would, please let me know your price and what the shipping to Oklahoma might be. Thanks.
Not a one-room schoolhouse, but for part of the 3rd grade I lived with my grandmother in a very rural part of the state and I did attend a wood frame two-room schoolhouse. Grades one through four were in one room with grades five through eight in the other. In the winter each room was heated by a Franklin pot-belly stove. The older boys were charged with bringing coal in from the outside where there was a large coal bin. The restrooms were outside also - two concrete block outhouses, one for the boys and one for the girls. The high school, for grades nine through twelve was a block away. I don’t know how many rooms it had but it was was made of native stone and was definitely larger. I visited that little town earlier this year. The old wooden two-room schoolhouse is long gone along with the concrete block coal bin and outhouses. Although the lot is now vacant you can still see where the schoolhouse sat. The native stone high school building is still there although it is now a community center, the schools having been incorporated into another district back in the late sixties.
wideangle wrote:
The climate change experts use data to prove that the earth's climate is changing. In cases of data, there must be a "normal" period use as a measure of what the "normal" temperature is. Can anyone here tell me the exact year the earth was "normal"? I'd love to know.
When you find out what year was "normal", please let me know. I'd love to learn the answer to that question also.
Of course the earth is round. Didn't B.o.B. ever see a globe when he was in school?
PAToGraphy wrote:
That's such a fun image.
Thank you very much. I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Consignment shop in Sulphur, Oklahoma