Friday, April 28, 2006

Google Releases Free 3D Modeling Software


Yesterday Google released Google SketchUp, a free version of their 3D modeling software, which makes our long-time vision of making 3D accessible to everyone a reality. Google is still offering SketchUp Pro 5 for design professionals like architects, designers, builders, art directors and game developers.

Both Google SketchUp and SketchUp Pro 5 enable you to place models in Google Earth; Pro users get some additional features.The new Google SketchUp is for the do-it-yourselfer, the hobbyist — really anyone who wants to build 3D models for use in Google Earth. Go ahead and model that new kitchen, or deck, landscape your virtual garden, or impress your teacher with a roller coaster or medieval castle. When you’re finished, place your model in Google Earth.

There! The beginning of a virtual world. Warning: don’t start messing with this stuff after dinner because your first experience could be an all-nighter… making an idea come to life in 3D can be very addicting.And what could be better than that? Well, sharing your work with everyone else through the 3D Warehouse. Accessible through both versions of SketchUp, 3D Warehouse enables you to upload, search, browse, view, and download SketchUp models. Just as you do with Google search, enter some keywords and the 3D Warehouse shows you all your options. Grab the one you want and import it into your model. (Note that the Warehouse is not stocked up yet — so model something yourself and upload it for all the world to see.)

Visionaries, utopians, virtual world builders: your time has come.

Hundreds of Users Manuals Online
UsersManualGuide.com offers free access to user manuals and user guides for many brands of equipment covering mobile phones, photo cameras, mother boards, monitors, software, tv, dvd's, and more..

Streaming MP3 May Be Banned

According to the EFF, a new Senate bill (S. 2644) sponsored by Senators Feinstein (D-CA) and Graham (R-SC) would effectively ban streaming MP3 for licensed music by requiring 'casters to use the most restrictive streaming format available (e.g., Windows Media or Real) rather than simply the most restrictive features of a chosen streaming format (e.g., Shoutcast or streaming MP3)."

Thursday, April 27, 2006

The Story of 1001 Wishes
There are a lot of good Flash animations about robots, vampires, and Mario, but precious few about actual human beings. The Story of 1001 Wishes does a lot to make up for this. It's the story of a young man, a young woman, and their hopes for the future.

Rise of the Neo-Greens

"Solar panels on the roof. Hybrid car in the garage. Organic-cotton clothes in the closet. Today's eco-radicals are voting with their dollars." Wired Magazine reports on today's emerging tribes of neo-green consumers.

Yahoo! Launches DVR Service
Yahoo launched Yahoo Go yesterday, a DVR and general Microsoft Media Center competitor based on the recently acquired Meedio technology.

The feature list is comprehensive: Use Yahoo Go to manage photos, search Yahoo videos, watch stored movies on your hard drive, listen to music and manage television shows via a full DVR (like Tivo or Microsoft Media Center). Yahoo Go is only available for Windows machines.


THE NEW look Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) seems to be giving the world an unusual moral code.

Microsoft Scanning Your Computer for Piracy

The Washington Post is reporting that a recent update by Microsoft is now scanning people's machines to see if they have valid license, and reporting back to Microsoft, all without user intervention.


"Before we can debate national energy policy--or even decide which petroleum substitutes might make sense for our personal vehicles--we need to know how these things stack up in the real world." -- Mike Allen, Popular Mechanics - May, 2006.

"So how far can you drive on a bushel of corn?" See the article.

Good advice that appeared on the Google blog to help prevent carpal tunnel syndrone and RSI from the staff doctor at Google.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

National Library Week Reception at the LRC

View photos from the 2006 National Library Week Reception held at the LRC.

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

You Can Help Stop the RIAA!

Take a Stand Against the Madness. Sign the Electronic Frontier Foundation's petition to Congress in protest of the RIAA bullying customers. They only need another 20,000 signatures.

"The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) is on a rampage, launching legal attacks against average Americans from coast to coast. Rather than working to create a rational, legal means by which its customers can take advantage of file-sharing technology and pay a fair price for the music they love, it has chosen to sue people like Brianna LaHara, a 12 year-old girl living in New York City public housing.

Brianna, and hundreds of other music fans like her, are being forced to pay thousands of dollars they do not have to settle RIAA-member lawsuits -- supporting a business model that is anything but rational. This crusade is generating thousands of subpoenas and hundreds of lawsuits, but not a single penny for the artists that the RIAA claims to protect.

Copyright law shouldn't make criminals out of 60 million Americans, and it's time for a change. Tell Congress that it's time to stop the madness!" -- Electronic Frontier Foundation.

How to Prolong iPod Battery Life

PlayList magazine gives some good tips to help prolong the battery life of your iPod.


In addition to satellite maps Google Maps now has street level maps and driving directions for most of Europe. (At this time Greece has only major roads and Bulgaria and Romania are still not included).

Monday, April 24, 2006

Here you'll find the Windows XP tips that give you the most bang for your buck; that are most useful in terms of security, functionality, and PC performance; and that are just plain cool.

Map of Gas Prices In the United States

GasBuddy.com publishes a USA National Gas Temperature Map. "Now you can see what gas prices are around the country at a glance." Check the prices in your county.

Thursday, April 20, 2006

NOAA Historical Weather Data

NOAA (the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) offers historical weather data from their climate website.

...users can click a desired location on a national map and be taken directly to the local climate page of the appropriate NOAA National Weather Service forecast office. Then, by clicking on the NOWData tab [far right]....past weather is available for the last two years with climate averages for the standard 30-year period of 1971-2000 and extremes for as long as a station has been taking observations.

2006 Pulitzer Prizes Announced

Bibliofuture writes, "The books that won the Pulitzer Prize were announced today (Tuesday, April 18). You can see the complete list that includes newspapers and articles that won here. Among the book and book-related winners:


  • Geraldine Brooks won for fiction for her March (Viking), which focuses on the life of the often-absent father, John March, in Louisa May Alcott's Little Women.
  • David M. Oshinsky won for history for his Polio: An American Story (Oxford University Press).
  • Caroline Elkins won in general nonfiction for Imperial Reckoning: The Untold Story of Britain's Gulag in Kenya (Holt).
  • Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin won for biography or autobiography for their American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer (Knopf).
  • Claudia Emerson won for poetry for Late Wife (Louisiana State University Press)."

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

A series of county-level choropleth maps, which shows the distribution of the larger and more regionally concentrated church bodies in the United States.

Monday, April 17, 2006

Cops Walking the MySpace beat

Meet the point-and-click police. A growing number of ordinary officers are working a new beat, turning to MySpace—an online network of individuals linked through personalized home pages—to collect clues and crack offline cases.

The History of Easter Candy

"The days are longer, the sun is brighter, the colors are rich, and the candies are pastel. It’s springtime for many parts of the world once again, and in celebration of its triumphant return we enter into the saccharin sanctity of a world filled with Marshmallow Peeps, Jelly Beans, and other well packaged bits of sweetness sure to bring about a sugar-induced coma." Ever wonder where the idea for Easter Candy came from. Read it here.

Top 10 Internet Sites for March 2006
Nielsen//NetRatings Top 10 is a monthly rating of top 10 Internet destinations

Thursday, April 13, 2006

Get local coupons via RSS from Zixxo
Users can find coupons via search or browse on the site, or receive email or RSS alerts for the location and/or coupon categories of their choice. Just select your zip code and find coupons for businesses in your area.

Yahoo! Releases 1m-Resolution Imagery for Entire Continental US


Last night Yahoo! Maps beta released 1-meter/pixel resolution color satellite photos for the entire continental US. This is significant because it is more consistent data instead of the patchwork of varying color, black and white, varying resolution imagery we are used to in other mapping applications like Google Maps/Earth, and Windows Live Local. Yahoo! now has the best medium resolution dataset for the entire continental US.

Now you really can see your house.







toread is a free email-based bookmark service. Just click on a web page and have it sent to your email for reading later.

Google Calendar Debuts



Google today released its online calendar Google Calendar. Closely integrated with G-Mail, the new calendar service makes it easy to "keep track of all your life's important events – birthdays, reunions, little league games, doctor's appointments – all in one place."

"Using Google Calendar, you can add events and invitations effortlessly, share with friends and family (or keep things to yourself), and search across the web for events you might enjoy. It's organizing made easy."

ElderBloggers

The NYT has a good article about senior citizen bloggers that includes interviews with Blogger users Mort Reichek and Milt Rebmann.
Quoth the Times:
While the 65-plus age range is notoriously tech-shy, many say that the blog-hosting companies make it simple to start and maintain one. Mr. Reichek said that when he went to Blogger.com — which is owned by Google — the site showed him how to set up a blog in easy steps."I'm a technophobe," he said. "But 1, 2, 3 and suddenly, I've got a blog."

Google's many facets presented on one page.

Wednesday, April 12, 2006

A Comic Strip About Life in the Academy

Jorge Cham, a mechanical engineering instructor at Caltech, has created a comic strip about academic life that has become a cult classic in the higher ed community. The strip, 'Piled Higher and Deeper (PHD),' receives over 3.5 million page views per month, according to Cham, who created the comic strip while he was a graduate student at Stanford.


A New Coalition to Improve Public Education

The STAND UP Coalition includes more than 50 community-based schools, education organizations, and others from throughout the country which have joined forces to address a common goal: demanding a solution our education crisis. The coalition works to engage all Americans in becoming part of the solution by providing valuable information and resources parents, guardians, concerned citizens, and communities can use to help make sure all young people graduate high school ready for college, work and citizenship.

Check out your local school on the website.


Like Baseball?


Ballbug is a new website that "spotlights the most buzzed-about baseball news from thousands of web sites. It auto-generates a summary page every 5 minutes, drawing on local news sites, national sports media, and baseball bloggers of various stripes."

Free Online Computer Games

"You don't care how you get your fix. You just want to play a new game right now and you don't want to pay a lot for the privledge." Check out 101 Free Games: the Definitive Guide to the Best New Games on the Web.

Windows Live Academic



Last night Academic Search for Live.com was launched at academic.live.com.
Academic search enables you to search for peer reviewed journal articles contained in journal publisher portals and on the web in locations like citeseer.

Yahoo! Instant Search

"Yahoo! Instant Search gives you answers as you type -- no more waiting! Why feel lucky when you can be right? With Instant Search results instantly appear for Yahoo! Shortcuts and common searches. Give it a spin."

Zines and the Zinester Librarian

From today's New York Times a profile of Zinester Jenna Freedman, her own zine 'Lower East Side Librarian' and her scholarly online catalog of zines based at the Barnard College Library.

Her online catalog starts off with a definition: "ZINES ARE ... short for magazine or fanzine, zines are self-publications, motivated by a desire for self-expression, not for profit.

Monday, April 10, 2006

Spectacular Mammatus Cloud Formations

Photos of mammatus cloud formations taken in Hastings Nebraska. Really cool!

The Most Lucrative College Degrees of 2006

Engineering degrees still demand top salaries in the CNN Money survey. Liberal Arts degrees are still dead last.

Friday, April 07, 2006

The Blooker Awards, for Books Arising From Blogs

A new trend in publishing. Turning blogs into books. Read the article and see the winners at USAToday.com.

A Virtual Tour of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake
on Google Earth

A computer-generated recreation of the seismic pounding taken by San Francisco during the devastating 1906 earthquake was launched online by the USGS. The virtual tour used geographic mapping by Google Earth to start with a view from space and swoop in on the 300-mile rupture along the San Andreas Fault that caused the earthquake.

FDA Probes Cell Phone Study
Following a Swedish study linking some brain tumors to prolonged mobile phone use, the Food and Drug Administration plans a safety review. Read the Wired Magazine article

Parents And Their Kids Room Together For This Show

A new reality show, Back on Campus, will premiere at 9 p.m. (CDT) Saturday on cable's ABC Family Channel (Cox Pensacola Channel 28). A group of four moms and dads became students at Drexel University in Philadelphia.The premise of the show, taped last spring, had four Drexel undergraduates rooming with a parent who enrolled for a semester. Read more at:
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/magazine/daily/14273455.htm

CAN YOU BELIEVE THEY SAID THAT? QUOTATIONS TRIVIA

From the quotes below, identify the work in which it appears and the character credited with the line.

1. “Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn.”

2. “It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to, than I have ever known.”

3. “All animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others.”

4. "You see, Wendy, when the first baby laughed for the first time, its laugh broke into a thousand pieces, and they all went skipping about, and that was the beginning of fairies."

5. "How often have I said to you that when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?"

6. "We are in Transylvania, and Transylvania is not England. Our ways are not your ways, and there shall be to you many strange things."

7. “How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thankless child.”

8. "I am sure that if the mothers of various nations could meet, there would be no more wars."

9. "I am alone and miserable; man will not associate with me; but one as deformed and horrible as myself would not deny herself to me. My companion must be of the same species and have the same defects. This being you must create."

10. "The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what Fiction means."


Thank you all for playing along this week. It's been fun! See you next year during National Library Week. "The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who cannot read them." - Mark Twain


  1. Rhett Butler in Gone with the Wind
  2. Sydney Carton in A Tale of Two Cities
  3. Napoleon in Anilmal Farm
  4. Peter Pan in Peter Pan
  5. Sherlock Homes in The Sign of Four
  6. Count Dracula in Dracula
  7. King Lear in King Lear
  8. Ruth Wilcox in Howard's End
  9. The monster in Frankenstein
  10. Miss Prism in The Importance of Being Earnest

2006 Student Art Exhibition

The 2006 Student Art Exhibition is on display in the Anna Lamar Switzer Center, Bldg. 15. The exhibit includes over 270 works of art from all studio classes.

Exhibit Hours: Monday - Thursday: 8:00 AM - 9:00 PM
    Friday: 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Opening reception and awards presentation is April 21, from 3 til 6 PM.

Summer Jobs for Students

Combine work, adventure and play in a great summer job. Get a summer job in Yellowstone, Yosemite, or another national park. Find a summer job as a camp counselor. Ski resorts, ranches, theme parks, tour companies and more are waiting for you. Check out the websites at:

CoolWorks
StudentJobs.gov
CampJobs.com
SummerJob.org
Ultimate Guide to Summer Jobs

Free Legal Help and Research on the Web

LawHelp helps low and moderate income people find free legal aid programs in their communities, and answers to questions about their legal rights.

Other helpful legal sites are:

Find Legal Help (from the American Bar Association),
FreeAdvice
LawGuru
ACORN Resource Center
ProSe Law Center
Self Help Support

Thursday, April 06, 2006

It Takes Character!

Can you identify these characters from literature? Shirley Korinchak and Sandra Hartley could. They are today's winners!


1. This Snooper from St. Mary Mead made her debut in Agatha Christie’s Murder at the Vicarage.
a. Nancy Drew
b. Miss Marple
c. Kinsey Milhone
d. Stephanie Plum



2. This precocious supernatural arts apprentice’s parents were killed by Lord Voldemort. He’s usually seen wearing a rugby shirt and glasses.
a. Dick Grayson
b. Clark Kent
c. Harry Potter
d. Bruce Wayne

3. She must survive must survive murder, mystery, storms, and smugglers before she can build a life with Jem Merlyn in Daphne Du Maurier’s Jamaica Inn .
a. Mary Yellan
b. Lady Dona St. Columb
c. Rebecca de Winter
d. Contessa Rachel Sangalletti


4. This crocodile fearing pirate captain shouldn’t scratch his nose.
a. Captain Crook
b. Captain Bligh
c. Captain Hook
d. Captain D.


5. His full name was Philip Pirrip but Magwitch and Miss Havisham, in the Dickens' novel in which he appeared, called him by what nickname?
a. Pup
b. Tiny Tim
c. Pip
d. Little John


6. His parents own the Benbow Inn and he finds "the map" in Stevenson's Treasure Island.
a. Jim Hawkins
b. Long John Silver
c. Captain D.
d. Billy Bones

7. This rascal said, "Like it? Well I don’t see why I oughtn’t to like it. Does a boy get a chance to whitewash a fence every day”?
a. Huck Finn
b. Dennis the Menace
c. Tom Sawyer
d. Puddinhead Johnson

8. Although she imagines that arsenic will supply a romantic death, Flaubert shows it to be a grotesque and painful end.
a. Juliet Capulet
b. Lady Chatterly
c. Emma Bovary
d. Edna Pontellier

9. Phoebe’s older brother, he is a sixteen-year-old junior who has just been expelled from Pencey Prep for academic failure.
a. Gene Forrester
b. Holden Caufield
c. Jerry Renault
d. Jeremy “Jem” Finch

10. A loyal pet until cruel men make him a pawn in their search for Klondike gold.
a. White Fang
b. Balto
c. Buck
d. Savage Sam



The answers are b,c,a,c,c,a,c,c,b, and c.

RIAA Recommends Students Drop Out of College

"An MIT student accused of copyright infringement has been documenting her struggles with the RIAA. Upon trying to negotiate her settlement, a representative told her that "the RIAA has been known to suggest that students drop out of college or go to community college in order to be able to afford settlements."

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Wednesday: Before and After Trivia

Below are the clues and answers for Wednesday's trivia which was based on combining the titles of two literary works to form a new title.......for example, Gone with the Wind in the Willows.


This one must have really been a stumper because only four of you took a shot at it. Teresa Jackson worked hard and ame out the winner with all ten answered correctly!

1. Mary, Colin, and Dickon lock the door and throw away the key to their floral wonderland when they stumble upon Hieronymus Bosch’s most famous and unconventional painting.

The Secret Garden of Earthly Delights


2. Umberto Eco’s medieval whodunit finds a lonely southern spinster searching for love in a monastic library in rural Yoknapatawpha County, Mississippi.

The Name of the Rose for Emily


3. While on holiday in Italy, Miss Lucy Honeychurch can’t choose between two suitors, so she shuts herself in her hotel room to watch her favorite James Bond movie about a mad industrialist who plans to destroy Silicon Valley.

A Room with a View to a Kill


4. Builders of a 12th-century cathedral must be forward-looking as they attempt to adhere to the ecological constraints set out by Al Gore.

Pillars of the Earth in the Balance


5. Alec Leamas, a British agent in early Cold War Berlin timetravels to North Carolina to wait for Inman, a Confederate army deserter to return home.

The Spy Who Came in from the Cold Mountain


6. Two children who are born at the stroke of midnight at the moment India becomes an independent nation, are switched in the hospital and grow up to perform in a Tony-award winning play about a speech therapist who falls in love with one of his deaf students.

Midnight’s Children of a Lesser God

7. For a year, Bridget, confides her hopes, her dreams, and her monstrously fluctuating poundage to Bettina Balser who is secret chronicling her own fears.

Bridget Jones Diary of a Mad Housewife


8. The Youngers, an African-American family living in Chicago, argue over how to spend a $10,000 insurance check while beautiful sexually-needy socialite Lady Brett Ashley falls hopelessly in love with newspaperman Jake Harris whom she cannot marry because he is impotent due to his war wounds.

A Raisin in the Sun Also Rises

9. Fitzgerald’s tragic romance about Rosemary Hoyt, a young actress, and a stylish American couple - Dick, a psychiatrist, and his wealthy wife, Nicole Diver who meet Tennessee Williams’ ex-Episcopal minister, T. Lawrence Shannon as serves as a tourist guide to a group of middle-aged Texas spinsters in Mexico.

Tender is the Night of the Iguana


10. Tom Sawyer’s good friend, a boy with a drunk for a father, who rises from his coffin when whiskey splashes on his corpse during a fight at the viewing.

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finnegan’s Wake

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

It's A Novel Idea!

What a well-read group we have at PJC! Although Dennis Reynolds was the first to answer all ten trivia questions correctly today, there were a number who answered all the questions correctly. They were Donna Lymons, Connie Coe, Pat Brewster, Martha Caughey, Jerome Beard and Deanna Moretz. Congratulations!

Here are the answers:


Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden
Grey-eyed Nitta Sayuri recounts her life as a young girl from a poor fishing village to a young entertainer in Kyoto during World War II and finally to New York’s Waldorf Astoria. When it was revealed that this novel had been written by a man, it caused quite a stir in the publishing world.

Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift
A British ship’s surgeon travels to four different lands. Because of shipwrecks and pirates, he spends time with the Yahoos, the Houhyhnms, the Laputans, and the people of Brobdingnag, as well as the more famous Lilliputians.

The Life of Pi by Yann Martel
A dangerous Bengal tiger named Richard Parker and 16-year-old Piscine Molitor Patel share a small lifeboat during a 227-day voyage across the Pacific. A powerful story of faith – Hindu, Jewish and Christian - and survival.

The Whipping Boy by Sid Fleischman
Jemmy, a poor boy who lived on the streets, now lives in the castle. Unfortunately, he receives the punishment each time Prince Horace misbehaves, because it is forbidden to spank, thrash or whack the spoiled monarch. The two boys have nothing in common and like each other even less than that. But when they are kidnapped after running away, they must learn to trust each other.

The Trial by Frank Kafka
On the morning of his thirtieth birthday, Josef K. wakes up and without warning or reason is arrested. No crime is specified. Josef endures the judicial process only to be executed on the morning of his thirty-first birthday without ever understanding why.

The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
A tale of two different Afghanistans. One is the privileged world of Amir’s childhood and the other is a country oppressed by the Taliban. It is the story of fathers and sons, friendship and betrayals, fierce cruelty and redeeming love.


The Jungle by Upton Sinclair Hoping to find the American dream, Jurgis Rudkus and his family arrive in America. They live in Chicago's stockyards district and work in the giant meatpacking plants and slaughterhouses. Sadly, the wealth and lifestyle they hoped to achieve is nowhere to be found.

A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest J. Gaines
In a small Louisiana community during the late 1940s, two men become unlikely friends. Jefferson, a young black man has been convicted of a murder that he did not commit and is sentenced to die. Grant has returned to his hometown to teach. As their friendship and wisdom grows, they learn the simple heroism of resisting and even defying what is expected.


A Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
Grabbed from Earth just seconds before the planet is destroyed to make room for an intergalactic freeway, Arthur Dent and his buddy Ford travel beyond Earth and get into horrible messes on this hilarious voyage.


The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown
Robert Langdon, a Harvard professor of symbology finds himself caught up in a deadly conspiracy that stretches back centuries. Can he solve the mystery involving ancient artwork, Jesus, Mary Magdalene, their child and the Holy Grail?

Tomorrow's trivia is a real brain-teaser: Before and After.

National Library Week



In the spirit of National Library Week. Some library videos from YouTube.

  1. Library Athletics How to get some exercise while studying in the library.
  2. Library Dominoes Fun in the Library.
  3. Reading on a Dream The library musical.

Monday, April 03, 2006

Thanks to all who played this morning's POETRY TRIVIA. Today's winner was Julia Ruengert from the English/Communication Department. Guess those folks do have an advantage!

The answers were:
Monday: POETRY TRIVIA

1. Which reclusive poet penned this:

"Because I could not stop for Death—He kindly stopped for me—The Carriage held but just Ourselves—And Immortality"
c. Emily Dickinson

2. What did Yeats intend to plant on Innisfree?
a. beans

3. Who wrote the following lines about a snowy evening?
"The woods are lovely, dark and deep. But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep,"
b. Robert Frost

4. Tennyson always insisted that this poem be the last poem printed in any anthology of his work.
b. Crossing the Bar

5. This farm was where Dylan Thomas spent much of his childhood.
d. Fern Hill

6. Complete the following line from an e.e. cummings’ poem: Spring is like a
b. a perhaps hand

7. In “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,” this friendly animal is senselessly killed.
c. An albatross

8. Which Harlem Renaissance poet asked:

"What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry uplike a raisin in the sun? Or fester like a sore—"
d. Langston Hughes

9. This poet was blind.
b. Homer

10. John Newton wrote:
“Amazing grace!
How sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me!
I once was lost, but now I’m found.
Was blind, but now I see.”

What was Newton’s profession before he became a minister?
c. slave ship captain


See you tomorrow when "It's a Novel Idea!"


Welcome To Daylight Savings Time

If you haven't done so already, remember to set your clocks (and watches) ahead one hour.