Lyrics: Yes i can see her Cause every girl here wanna be her.. Ohh she's a diva They feel the same and i wanna meet her They say she low down ...
David Byrne -- Music For The Knee Plays Label:EMI Music (Netherlands) Catalog#:064-24 0381-1 Format:Vinyl, LP Country:Netherlands Released:1985 ...
Trader's Mecca Opens
The newest addition to Westville’s expanding economy and its emergence as a destination is Trader’s Market, a year-round flea market that beckons customers to “shop, swap and save.”
During its grand opening last weekend, a giant tethered balloon drew a visual line in the sky to the market’s location at 86 Fitch St., at the corner of Onyx Street, just a block away from bustling Whalley Avenue.
The Wintergreen of Westville apartment complex serves as a backdrop to the enterprise, separated by a meandering Wintergreen Brook.
Business owners Alyssa DiSpazio and Vicky Jacobs (pictured) said that property owner Paul DiSpazio (husband of Jacobs and father of Alyssa DiSpazio) chose Westville among two properties under consideration for the flea market because of its central location—adjacent to a main city artery and bus route, as well as Southern Connecticut State University. They also thought Westville could benefit from more business activity on the weekends, as well as some of the new jobs that will be associated with the market.
David Brooks: Where wisdom lives - ContraCostaTimes.com
SOMETIMES LIFE presents you with a basic philosophical choice. Americans are going to have to confront a giant one over the next several years.
It starts in the wonky world of Medicare. As presently constructed, Medicare is based on an open-ended fee-for-service system. The government pays providers each time they deliver a service. The more services they provide, the more money they get.
The fee-for-service system is incredibly popular. Recipients don't have to think about the costs of their treatment, and they get lots of free money. The average 56-year-old couple pays about $140,000 into the Medicare system over a lifetime and receives about $430,000 in benefits back. The program is also completely unaffordable. Medicare has unfinanced liabilities of more than $30 trillion. The Medicare trustees say the program is about a decade from insolvency....
But How Does It Feel? | Gamers With Jobs
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how I feel when playing a game. Like select cities some games have a specific, present feel to them. It was when I was playing Portal 2 that I remembered the last time I had a strong, specific feel; playing the first Portal.
I played Portal late to the game so when press was talking about it I tried to ignore everything I heard. Still, I was ingesting a lot of podcasts so I felt like I heard a decent amount of game talk. I never heard any, or maybe many (bad memory), conversations about my strongest attachment to Portal.
When I played the game I felt cold and alone. I felt situated in a sterile, if broken, world in which for all I knew I was the last vestige of human life. And I felt alone. Alone, I was surrounded by artificial lives that, while buffoonish at times, were bent on causing my determined demise.
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