There's a long-standing rumor that Grandpa Joe has a cocaine nails.
However,
Moderators: Bakhtosh, EvilHomer3k
Track & Field was *my* game in the arcades of the 80's. I started off with the comb, but eventually worked my way to just being able to sort of lock my hand in a position to do just as well if not better without it. The worst version was the trackball variant - you would end up with blisters after a day of gaming.LordMortis wrote: ↑Wed Dec 16, 2020 2:44 pm Similar to this the Track and Field game at the arcade where you were supposed to his alternating buttons was defeated by a comb. You just placed the comb between your forefinger and middle finger. Your middle finger acted a light weight to push the comb down on one button and you tapped the comb with your other hand to created the perfect fast rhythm. Not quite a perfect was just using all four fingers in each hand in a scratching motion.
"Our preliminary analyses shows that the figures drawn on the front of the counter, represent, at least in part, the food and drink that were sold there," said Valeria Amoretti, a site anthropologist
Cenobite. noun
ce·no·bite | \ ˈse-nə-ˌbīt , ˈsē- \
A member of a religious group living together in a monastic community
Vox, Dec 2018"Dairy is Scary," a billboard at Ashland and Lombardi avenues announces in big, white capital letters on a black background. There's no further explanation.
The message is part of a campaign, in the United States and Canada, to draw attention to what the principals say are issues of animal cruelty, health dangers and other "scary" elements of the dairy industry.
Billboards have gone up as far away as Los Angeles, Atlanta and eastern Canada. The Atlanta billboards were posted before the 2019 Super Bowl.
An almond doesn’t lactate, I will confess,” declared Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb this summer at a Politico summit.
This droll observation was music to the ears of the $35.5 billion US cattle milk industry, which lately has been challenging the $1.6 billion plant-based milk industry’s right to use the word “milk.” Gottlieb seems to be sympathetic: His agency has proposed enforcing its own labeling rules for milk, which could prevent producers of almond milk and oat milk from continuing to use the term.
But plant milk producers scored a key victory on Thursday. The US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that calling almond milk “milk” is not deceptive, upholding the dismissal of a lawsuit called Painter v. Blue Diamond Growers.
Its expensive. Have to buy it by the can. We used it when we had the kennel for the little pups when there were feeding problems.
Trying to build a reverse-Rome?