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Amish build quality with a hole to post through cartoon dog bones.

But then, that's Alabama for you.

 

Weirdness #1: From our "News of the Weird" files in the Huntsville (behind the) Times comes this item about an Alabama GOP type who, while on a business trip to New Zealand - ostensibly on contract with disaster relief firm Ceres NZ for earthquake recovery & relief - claims to have donated sperm to at least 10 women there, though he claims not to have had sexual intercourse with them, whom are all now pregnant, and will soon give birth. He has abandoned his wife, and has moved to that nation. According to his wife Kathy, he has told her that "he is not coming back."

 

As his personal website states, "Bill Johnson - former Director for the Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs," is a former Birmingham city councilman & cabinet member to then-governor Bob Riley.

 

I reckon when GOP types go bad, they go freakin' NUTZO!

 

Weirdness #2: See the pic of the man at the WhistleStop Barbecue competition? Why is it next to a story headlined "Sperm donor leaves family"? Isn't that kinda' freaky weird? I mean, really folks. Do you want to read that, think about that, or - God forbid - eat that while chowing down on... whatever the Hell they do at WhistleStop? Jeremy Pope - the man pictured in the photo - will rightfully be highly pissed off. Gee... thanks, Huntsville (behind the) Times! NOT!

 

Weirdness #3: Bad Layout design at the Huntsville (behind the) Times. We've already noted that, right? But here's more weirdness. See the headline "Times wins 8 firsts in state competition"? Yeah... well, one of 'em was for layout and design. Here's the sad irony: It was for a story entitled "Dark Days," published on Friday April 29, 2011 following the lengthy & massive electrical power outage of the April 27 tornadoes. How is that ironic? This solitary example of poor layout trumpets alleged excellence in layout design. Layout designer Bethany Buckley - whose work won the award - has since moved on, and is now employed by "The Virginian Pilot," in Norfolk, VA.

 

Okay. It took me 78 days, but I'm back!

 

Again...

 

See more frogs here!

© The old ambassador felt miserable, tired and uses. More and more frequently recently, he yearned here the end of his days. His young wife, Eva, did not participate any far too big help for him either. Although he loved her from hearts and he could be ...

© The old ambassador felt miserable, tired and uses. More and more frequently recently, he yearned here the end of his days. His young wife, Eva, did not participate any far too big help for him either. Although he loved her from hearts and he could be ...

Bronze, Late Archaic, ca. 530 B.C.E., North-West Greek, Allegedly from Greece

L. 11.5 cm.

 

Solid-cast by the lost wax process and worked in the cold.

 

Condition: the metal strip on his left with traces of the hole for riveting broken off and in antiquity a new hole drilled in what remains (present overall length about 7 mm shorter than originally). The eyes and nose slightly flattened.

 

Patina a dark olive green.

 

The banquet in Ancient Greece, whether intimate or with many guests, fulfilled an important social function, reserved for men - free women were not admitted, though female servants, musicians, dancers and courtesans were present.

 

Originally an eminently boisterous gathering given over to wine-drinking, the serving of food, entertainment, and accompanying music, it evolved over time into an occasion also for cultural intercourse: the reading of poetry, philosophical debate and other intellectual pursuits.

 

The smiling banqueter wearing a wreath is reclining on a kline [1], his left elbow resting on a cushion - the hand holding a phiale; a drinking horn in his right hand.

 

A remarkably close comparison is a banqueter in the Volos [2] Museum . They are very similar for some of the cold-working such as the two parallel engraved lines that terminate the drapery over the ankles, on the Volos example also what appears to be a zigzag or lozenge filling, similar to the zigzag lines on either side of the seam of their cushion. Their couches are identical and the mattresses of both decorated with groups of triple vertical strokes. Both pieces are very close in size and could come from the same vessel.

 

A good parallel is the banqueter in the British Museum [3], said to have been found at Dodona, usually ascribed to a Peloponnesian workshop, more precisely Corinth, and dated in the second half of the 6th century, though E. Walter-Karydi ascribes it to a local Dodona school [4].

 

He is substantial, of finer modelling and engraving and with a magnificent plastic flow; more sophisticated and spirited, beaming with humour, he is a superior creation to these slightly provincial examples, with their rather awkwardly upright position. But the British Museum banqueter has a valid claim to being the finest extant Greek bronze. He is also solid-cast, his couch is wider, imperceptibly curved with flat underside, and most likely once attached to a vessel.

 

By contrast, the present statuette is on a narrower curved couch - as is the Volos example - with the underside hollowed out [5], but on either side of both perforated metal strips project for riveting.

 

The great similarity and discrepancies between the three banqueters pose a problem. There is a contrast between the spirited expression of the British Museum banqueter - the plasticity of his body and drapery, and the simple rendering of the couch - with the parallels. The British Museum banqueter seems to show a neckline of a tunic, though he is naked from the waist up; Volos has a faint resemblance of a neckline (also slanting incisions on his left arm) and our example no indication. The British Museum banqueter rests his right hand on his right knee and in his left holds a solid-cast phiale with an engraved line for the inner rim to indicate depth; the Volos example rests his right hand slightly behind the knee and holds a rhyton in his left; and on ours the right hand holds a rhyton and the left an omphalos phiale. The three pieces differ for the tilts of their heads: ours with the neck slightly tilted forward but the gaze straight ahead, and on the British Museum and Volos examples the necks held straighter and the eyes gaze slightly up.

 

On the British Museum figure the mass of the hair down the back is admirably worked with the greatest detailing also over the forehead and on either side of the neck. The hair on Volos is trying to imitate the British Museum style though the cold-working is far less refined, especially so for either side of the neck, with on ours only simple horizontal strokes; over the forehead of the Volos a simpler rendering is similar to that on our example. The top of the head of all three is smooth, the mass of hair down the back is smooth on ours and we cannot tell for Volos.

 

The same artist could not have produced all three; but are the present example and Volos by a lesser artisan in the same workshop? More likely, they are imitations by an artist from a different school who saw and admired the ensemble to which the British Museum example [6] belonged, whether in a sanctuary at Dodona or thereabouts [7].

 

Our banqueter and the Volos example could be from one of several centres of North-West Greece, possibly a workshop at Apollonia on the periphery of Epirus, or from a Thessalian workshop inspired by the school that produced the British Museum banqueter.

  

Archaeology Glossary

       

1 In reality, klinai usually had legs which are never shown on bronze examples with banqueters made to be fixed to the rims of vessels.

 

2 Volos Museum M 111, H: 6.7 cm L: 11.5 cm from Philia near Karditsa (found 1962), Thessaly (the author unfortunately has not seen the piece but was sent by a friend a most useful frontal snapshot, but poor due to the lighting conditions). K. Romiopoulou brought our attention to the latter and a similar piece (M 115, H: 5.8 cm; L: 9.8 cm, from Crannon (found 1965), Thessaly, "not as good in quality as the former" in a letter dated 27 June 1994.

 

3 British Museum GR 1954.10-18.1.

 

4 Walter-Karydi, E.: Bronzen aus Dodona-eine epirotische Erzbildnerschule, JbBerlMus 23, 1981, no. 20, pp. 20, 30.

 

5 For the present example and surely also for the Volos bronze, possibly for affixing with lead to a vessel rim.

 

6 To enable comparison, a metal analysis was carried out (at our suggestion graciously approved by Brian Cook) at the British Museum on the present example and theirs: and though the tin content was similar in both, the lead content on ours was far higher (17.5 against 10.7%) which, added to their different trace element patterns, indicates that they are unlikely to be closely related. (Report by D.R. Hook, British Museum Research Laboratory, 23 November 1989. It would be most interesting to carry out a similar analysis on the Volos banqueter which

might confirm that it belonged to the same vessel as the present example.)

 

7 However few and fortuitous the finds, these figures may be a coincidence that supports the above hypothesis. The man who made this example either saw the vessel from which the British Museum piece came or, highly improbably, another almost identical. We do not believe that bronze vessels adorned

with figures of the quality of the British Museum banqueter were common.

 

Text from the website of George Ortiz.

© The old ambassador felt miserable, tired and uses. More and more frequently recently, he yearned here the end of his days. His young wife, Eva, did not participate any far too big help for him either. Although he loved her from hearts and he could be ...

© The old ambassador felt miserable, tired and uses. More and more frequently recently, he yearned here the end of his days. His young wife, Eva, did not participate any far too big help for him either. Although he loved her from hearts and he could be ...

Chimú culture sculptural bottle representing sexual intercourse between two deers

Period between the demise of the Moche culture and the conquest by the Inca (850–1470 CE)

Trujillo: Museo Arqueológico UNT

 

Visit www.aurado-wazaif.blogspot.com or www.islamiwazaif.com

Islamic and Quranic Wazaif in urdu, Ahadees, Masnoon Duain, Durood Sharif, Complete Quran Pak with Urdu and English translation, ghareloo totkay in urdu, beauty tips in urdu, health tips in urdu and find the solution of all your problems through Rohani ilaj.

 

Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/islamiwazaifurdu

Youtube Channel: www.youtube.com/channel/UCRlhhJmhg3PNF7T_mrKGNgg

Twitter: twitter.com/iftikharalamsbg

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Dailymotion Channel: www.dailymotion.com/islamiwazaifdua

 

© The old ambassador felt miserable, tired and uses. More and more frequently recently, he yearned here the end of his days. His young wife, Eva, did not participate any far too big help for him either. Although he loved her from hearts and he could be ...

© The old ambassador felt miserable, tired and uses. More and more frequently recently, he yearned here the end of his days. His young wife, Eva, did not participate any far too big help for him either. Although he loved her from hearts and he could be ...

© The old ambassador felt miserable, tired and uses. More and more frequently recently, he yearned here the end of his days. His young wife, Eva, did not participate any far too big help for him either. Although he loved her from hearts and he could be ...

© The old ambassador felt miserable, tired and uses. More and more frequently recently, he yearned here the end of his days. His young wife, Eva, did not participate any far too big help for him either. Although he loved her from hearts and he could be ...

The particular Arts

Nathaniel Woo July twelve, 2015

If we have discovered anything from your popular fifty Shades collection, it’s that people love to learn about sex. Regardless of whether we’re in your own home, on a teach, or seated on a recreation area bench, all of us can’t assi...

 

headlists.com/10-freaky-sexual-intercourse-scenes-within-...

Japanese Beetles mating (Sigma 18-50mm with reversing ring.)

My Facebook Page

© The old ambassador felt miserable, tired and uses. More and more frequently recently, he yearned here the end of his days. His young wife, Eva, did not participate any far too big help for him either. Although he loved her from hearts and he could be ...

Many one-room "Little Red Schoolhouses" may be found in use throughout the Dutch Country - The Amish Gentleman is driving his wagon along a back road near Intercourse, Penna.

 

Mailed from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania to Mr. & Mrs. Joe Manda of Sharon, Pennsylvania on July 30, 1963:

 

Hi Having a good time. It's pretty peaceful here. A lot more commercial than Lee's day. Joe, Mary Ann & Kids

 

Lusterchrome

SM-1

CAPA-018849

© The old ambassador felt miserable, tired and uses. More and more frequently recently, he yearned here the end of his days. His young wife, Eva, did not participate any far too big help for him either. Although he loved her from hearts and he could be ...

Amish Family out to visit friends and family on Memorial Day in Lancaster County, PA

I did a double take when looking at the dead sunflowers.... then promptly grabbed my camera and (in my mind) started my porno directing career 8=========D ~ ~ ~ ~

My wife had constant, severe pain during intercourse in a previous 20-year-long marriage. Karezza lovemaking healed her vagina within a few weeks of our honeymoon in 2012, and since then she has been pain-free and she experiences continually increasing levels of pleasure during our daily lovemaking.

 

See synergyexplorers.org/ for more details on karezza.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rr2_g586mXs

The Hidden Factor in Relationship Disharmony

Some color shots for an otherwise grey day....

 

Taken in Intercourse last November

Some color shots for an otherwise grey day....

 

Taken in Intercourse last November

Pennsylvania Dutch Country, also called the Deitscherei in Deitsch, refers to an area of southeastern Pennsylvania, United States that by the American Revolution had a high percentage of Pennsylvania Dutch inhabitants. Religiously, there was a large portion of Lutherans. There were also German Reformed, Moravian, Amish, Mennonite, and other German Christian sects. The term was used in the middle of the 20th century as a description of a region with a distinctive Pennsylvania Dutch culture, but in recent decades the composition of the population is changing and the phrase is used more now in a tourism context than any other.

 

Geographically the area referred to as Amish/Dutch country centers around the cities of Allentown, Hershey, Lancaster, Reading, and York. Pennsylvania Dutch Country encompasses the counties of Chester, Lancaster, York, Adams, Franklin, Dauphin, Lebanon, Berks, Montgomery, Bucks, Northampton, Lehigh, Schuylkill, Snyder, Union, Juniata, Mifflin, Huntingdon, Northumberland, and Centre. Pennsylvania Dutch immigrants would spread from this area outwards outside the Pennsylvania borders between the mountains along river valleys into neighboring Maryland (Washington and Frederick counties), West Virginia, New Jersey (Warren and northern Hunterdon counties), Virginia (Shenandoah Valley), and North Carolina. The larger region has been historically referred to as Greater Pennsylvania. The historic Pennsylvania Dutch diaspora in Ontario, Canada has been referred to as Little Pennsylvania.

 

The western counties of the region experienced industrialization as well, with Hershey Foods being the most notable example, but it was less intensive, and agriculture retained a larger share of the economy. In the middle of the 20th century, both Amish and non-Amish entrepreneurs began to promote the area as a tourist destination. Though there are still plenty of Amish attempting to follow their traditional way of life, tourism and population growth have significantly changed the appearance and cultural flavor of the area. The region is within 50 miles of Philadelphia, Baltimore, Maryland, and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and has not escaped the effects of being located on the western edge of the East Coast conurbation which stretches from Washington, D.C. to New York City.

 

The Old Order Amish and Old Order Mennonites, who have resisted these urbanization efforts most successfully, have retained aspects of their 18th century way of life, including the Deitsch dialect; however, these groups have changed significantly in the last two hundred years. Nevertheless, for the Old Order groups, change has come slower, and gradually they have become more and more distinctively different as the surrounding rural and urban population of Pennsylvania has changed.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Dutch_Country

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_Creative_Commons_...

KT was a little too excited at the prospect of being in Intercourse. As were we all. Didn't exactly come out clearly, but this was after about 7 takes.

... depiction of lesbian intercourse

A nice backlit Pansy, seen at the Best Western Intercourse Village Inn, outside of Lancaster in Pennsylvania's Amish Country.

The pol area proved more valuable as a place to hawk hash merchandise than to get wet.

I'm not sure many of these are still in Explore now, but I've had a good haul recently*, so I thought I'd celebrate it.

 

1. AAAAR2D2, 2. 10/05/2009 (Day 2.130) - No Angel Came, 3. Romano-British Infantry, 4. Monsieur Hulot, 5. Towards The Light, 6. 25/04/2009 (Day 3.115) - Take Me To Your Leader, 7. Warning: Perverts Will Attempt Intercourse With Unattended Cars!, 8. 15/04/2009 (Day 3.105) - The Rest Of Today Is TBA,

 

9. 04/04/2009 (Day 3.94) - Meditation On Hill 60, 10. 02/04/2009 (Day 3.92) - Lego Bunny, 11. 29/03/2009 (Day 3.88) - Walking To The End Of The World, 12. 27/03/2009 (Day 3.86) - That Was The Day The Ancient Songs Of Blood And War Spilled From A Hole In The Sky ..., 13. Lame Breakfast Of Champions, 14. 14/03/2009 (Day 3.73) - Calculating Pie, 15. Kaptain Kobold: The Movie, 16. Lego Dalek,

 

17. 25/02/2009 (Day 3.56) - Definitions, 18. 12/02/2009 (Day 3.43) - I Think, 19. 07/02/2009 (Day 3.38) - The Cliffs Of Bare Island, 20. 04/01/2009 (Day 3.4) - It Came From Beneath The Sea, 21. 07/10/2008 (Day 2.281) - The Adventures Of Tranzilla, Queen Of The Desert, 22. Winner!, 23. 30/07/2008 (Day 2.212) - The Descent Of Man, 24. 17/06/2008 (Day 2.169) - On The Road,

 

25. 17/05/2008 (Day 2.138) - Godzilla's Day Off, 26. 12/05/2008 (Day 2.133) - You Either Love It Or Hate It, 27. 03/05/2008 (Day 2.124) - Playhouse, 28. Breakfast, 29. 03/03/2008 (Day 2.63) - A Good Pick, 30. Ork Dropship, 31. Freebooterz!, 32. Cliffs Can Kill,

 

33. Puffin Skull, 34. 07/08/2007 (Day 250) - Dicing With Day 250, 35. Chillis, Pepper, Soy Sauce And A Clove Of Dalek, 36. Peg-Leg Potter - Pirate Wizard, 37. 12/07/2007 (Day 224) - Today I Will Mostly Be Releasing Man-Eating Badgers Into The Area, 38. Monthly Scavenger Hunt - December 2005, 39. 08/06/2007 (Day 190) - WTF? Dude, Where Are The Leylandii??, 40. Human Parts,

 

41. Light Through Ivy, 42. The Future's Not Ours To See, 43. 03/04/2007 (Day 124) - Astride The World, 44. Maelstrom, 45. 23/03/2007 (Day 113) - Hulot, 46. 06/03/2007 (Day 96) - I Am The Walrus, 47. 24/02/2007 (Day 86) - Shadow Play, 48. Ivan Petrovich Pavlov,

 

49. 30/01/2007 (Day 61) - iPod Self-Portrait, 50. "Now Pay Attention Dougal! This Lego Brick Is Small, But That One Is Far Away!", 51. 12/01/2007 (Day 43) - Lust, 52. 25/12/2006 (Day 25) - Minifig, 53. 23/12/2006 (Day 23) - The Dhaka Project, 54. Cards and Dice, 55. I Can't Believe It's Not Buddha, 56. Torchwood,

 

57. Bride Of Frankenstein, 58. What's In My (Dice) Bag?, 59. Jump!, 60. If This Picture Doesn't Get Into Explore, The Panda Gets It!, 61. Flickr Downtime, 62. Zidane, 63. Walk Into The Light, 64. Clones On A Summer's Day,

 

65. Web, 66. Alison Lapper. Not Pregnant, 67. Pear: Shaped, 68. Didg, 69. What's For Dinner?, 70. Pebble Pattern, 71. Stamp Out Motorcyclists, 72. Miniature Pub

 

*I cheated on one by putting it in The Golden Garden, though.

 

Created with fd's Flickr Toys.

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