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Dimensional Door - Freeople Thread 16
Posted on 04/16/2004 6:37:21 PM PDT by Mo1
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To: ValerieUSA
It's showing up for me . . . .I'm using an IMac and my browser is I.E.
I don't see your name on it tho' Valerie . . . don't let someone steal it from you . . . it's too good.
3,321
posted on
05/28/2004 6:36:08 PM PDT
by
HopeandGlory
(Hey, Liberals . . . PC died on 9/11 . . . GET USED TO IT!!!)
To: restornu
Wow. That is really pretty.
3,322
posted on
05/28/2004 6:43:53 PM PDT
by
sweetliberty
("Better to keep silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.")
To: lodwick
Oh Loddy! That's just wrong!
3,323
posted on
05/28/2004 6:45:22 PM PDT
by
sweetliberty
("Better to keep silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.")
To: Mo1
"What a beautiful map" I like it.
3,324
posted on
05/28/2004 6:46:50 PM PDT
by
sweetliberty
("Better to keep silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.")
To: grannie9
3,325
posted on
05/28/2004 6:48:13 PM PDT
by
sweetliberty
("Better to keep silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.")
To: Conservababe; ValerieUSA; lodwick
"JimRob will be in Austin on June 9th on his tour trip. Is your chapter going to meet with him?" He's going to be here on the 3rd. We have a big day planned.
3,326
posted on
05/28/2004 6:54:40 PM PDT
by
sweetliberty
("Better to keep silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.")
To: grannie9
3,327
posted on
05/28/2004 6:57:22 PM PDT
by
sweetliberty
("Better to keep silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.")
To: sweetliberty
Cripes - it's been so long that anyone's posted, that I had to go back and check...
Yes, that is VERY wrong.
To: lodwick
Not a gung ho posting day here....Everyone making it a four day holiday I reckon....
3,329
posted on
05/28/2004 8:30:27 PM PDT
by
westmex
(To he!! with it all)
To: westmex
We went to my granddaughter's tee ball game this evening. Oh, lord love a duck, how cute those six year old girls are, trying to learn the game. They posture on the field in poses of professionalism, and then let the ball roll right passed them. And when at bat, they hit the ball and just must watch to see where it goes instead of running. Our Jenna ran with her hands out at her side when running the bases, and very slowly. When we asked her why, she told us "well, I have to keep my helmet on, don't I?" I love it, Westy.
To: Conservababe
You must be the only one left alive on the thread...
I got a advertisement from Fleetwood the other day trying to sell me a big diesel motorhome....lol...
3,331
posted on
05/28/2004 8:43:30 PM PDT
by
westmex
(To he!! with it all)
To: Conservababe

Think I'm going to call it a day here...Mañana..
.
.....Westy....
3,332
posted on
05/28/2004 8:48:32 PM PDT
by
westmex
(To he!! with it all)
To: westmex
Well, they can smell out a camper anywhere, no? LOL
Since it is a holiday, we are not going camping. Been there and done that and don't care for the crowds of party campers.
So, we are having each of the grandkids spend the night... tonight, tomorrow and Sunday.
Tonight is is the middle child, Jeremiah's turn to be a Prince. He has already had ice cream for supper and nothing else and is expecting a donut run tomorrow for breakfast. Of course, being a prince for the night entitles him to kick me off the computer for him to seat his four year old butt in my chair to peruse the internet. And he does, Westy. His parents had to put some kind of block on their computer so that he cannot access the net without their knowledge. But, now he has finally sucking his thumb, so he must be sleepy. LOL
To: Conservababe; westmex
Just check in and out every one left hours ago!
To: Conservababe; westmex
To: Conservababe; westmex

This NASA (news - web sites) Spitzer Space Telescope image obtained 16 February, 2004 shows a cluster of newborn stars.(NASA/JPL/CALTECH)

The youngest planet ever detected -- a baby less than one million years old -- may be orbiting a young star in the constellation Taurus, scientists using NASA (news - web sites)'s Spitzer Space Telescope reported on May 27, 2004. In this artist's conception, the possible newfound planet spins through a clearing in a nearby star's dusty, planet-forming disc. The possible infant planet was spotted circling a star known as CoKu Tau 4, some 420 light-years away, according to astronomer Dan Watson of the University of Rochester, New York. FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY NO SALES REUTERS/NASA/Handout

This image of Saturn is a view from NASA (news - web sites)'s Hubble Space Telescope (news - web sites) on Monday, March 22, 2004. Camera exposures in four filters were combined to form the Hubble image and render colors similar to what the eye would see through a telescope focused on Saturn. The magnificent rings, at nearly their maximum tilt toward Earth, show subtle hues which indicate the trace chemical differences in their icy composition. (AP Photo/ NASA/ESA/Erich Karkoschka, University of Arizona)

The planet Saturn is shown in views near and far in these photographs released by NASA (news - web sites) on May 26, 2004. The top image is a view from NASA's Earth-orbiting Hubble Space Telescope (news - web sites) taken on March 22, 2004. The subtle pastel colors of ammonia-methane clouds trace a variety of atmospheric dynamics. Saturn displays its familiar banded structure, with haze and clouds at various altitudes. The magnificent rings, at nearly their maximum tilt toward Earth, show subtle hues which indicate the trace chemical differences in their icy composition. The bottom image from the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft was returned on May 16, 2004, when its imaging science subsystem narrow-angle camera was too close to fit the entire planet in its field-of-view. Cassini is still about 20 million kms (12.4 million miles) away and only 36 days from reaching Saturn. Cassini has two cameras, and this narrow angle image was taken at a range of 24.3 million kms (15.1 million miles). Enceladus, one of Saturn's 31 known moons, appears near the south pole at the bottom of the image.
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