Ah.

Ah.

Filed under Found Online, Fun With Stock Images, Uncategorized
I really hate that this is the name for the shade of wet n’ wild-brand (see: cheap, available) Highlighting & Concealing Pen I bought.
I hated but am coming around to the fact that it apparently either contains or belongs to something called (an) illumi-naughty™.
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“I’m a one-track pony.”
Filed under Something I Said, Uncategorized
Via Wikipedia:
“In school, Johnson was an awkward, talkative youth and was elected president of his 11th-grade class. He graduated from Johnson City High School (1924), having participated in public speaking, debate, and baseball.[12][13] At age 15, Johnson was the youngest member of his class and is believed to have been the youngest graduate of the school. In the months following his graduation, Johnson moved to California amid pressure by his parents to go to college. Johnson supported himself by picking grapes.[14][full citation needed] He enrolled in Southwest Texas State Teachers College (SWTSTC) in the summer of 1924, where students from unaccredited high schools could take the 12th-grade courses needed for admission to SWTSTC at San Marcos. Johnson later said that he was kicked out of the school.[15]“
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Seven-year-old Johnson with his trademark cowboy hat
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…who very well-intention-edly, I’m sure, told me years ago on what were fairly early dates (and, it turned out, also late ones) that I didn’t have to shave my legs anymore, that they wouldn’t mind if I didn’t, “would still touch them,” etc.:
Well, thanks. And I won’t mind if you stop showing up for work, though I’ve assumed you had your own reasons for doing so thus far.
Filed under Delayed Comeback, Uncategorized

Novelist and poet Helen Jackson’s remarkable “A Century of Dishonor” stirred public outrage over the U.S. government’s mistreatment of Native Americans. Her book centered on seven tribes, among them: Cheyennes, Nez Perce, Sioux, Cherokees and detailed four massacres in particular. At her own expense, she sent a copy of the book to every member of Congress.
http://www.thewildwest.org/cowboys/wildwestlegendarywomen/204-helenhuntjackson
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