Now that our newspaper has been reinstated, I did read the news, and I have a thorough insight into so many happenings. I now know that the subject of today's interview would eat two slices of pizza and then go to the library where she "would spend tons of time studying." I read that the Troy police have "no reason to question the veracity" of a teenaged girl who shot her father to death even though her story has more holes than Swiss cheese. I found out that the entire muddled mare's nest of the Working Families Party ballot fraud case may hinge on three little words, "Had I known," coupled with what distance constitutes an arm's length. Sound Off let me know that when it comes to analogue vs. digital, that "just with the timing when you need it most, the digital picture disappears." The Pulse of the People contributor exposes Hospice as another deception. "Like Moses coming down Mount Sinai on his ass, ...Hospice speaks to your heart but they ain't no Jesus." Reading the second letter pretty much illustrates the scientific-based truth that the use of computers causes insanity. I hope we reflect on that, and not just react. The erudite Dr. Chartock sums up his lengthy and largely unreadable column by remarking that when Ferdinand got angry, he got stung by a bee. And, finally, I found out that today marks the 51st birthday of Jackie Earle Haley.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment