This will allow him to speak and eat properly -maybe even breathe properly- for the first time in fifteen years. That trumps the appearance factor any day, although I'm sure he is glad to look better.
OK, help me out with the one I can't figure out or recall:
Jerry Lewis Dick Clark The Green Hornet & Kato/Van Williams and Bruce Lee Sammie Davis, Jr. Jose Jimenez/Bill Dana ***(not sure) Colonel Klink/Werner Klemperer Lurch/Ted Cassidy Don Ho Santa Claus/Andy Devine Art Linkletter Edward G. Robinson Suzy Knickerbocker (a gimme) Carpet King (is he a celebrity?)
What if I were to buy four tickets for a family? They'd still charge my husband extra for going over the weight limit, even though the total for the entire family would be WAY less than the weight limit for four people.
Strange, isn't it? Both articles were from mental_floss, by different authors. From what I recall, he was madly in love with her, but she wasn't as hot on him. And most affairs burn more brightly in the beginning than over the long haul. Many of these great affairs were people who died young, or in the case of Napoleon and Josephine, eventually divorced.
Thanks, y'all! So in essence, the employer is wanting to do something like read your email! That's totally over the line.
I don't post anything on the internet that isn't for the public. But my email is different -and personal messages on Facebook that are password-protected are just as private.
Apparently I don't understand Facebook, or I don't use it the way other people do. What would an employer learn about you with your password that they wouldn't learn just looking at your Facebook profile? As I understand it, the only thing they need a password for is to change or delete your page. You know, like if someone wanted the password to my blog.
So when I first encountered this controversy, I figured maybe employers didn't understand how Facebook worked, but maybe its me. Do they really demand control over your site, or do they just want to monitor what you post? If that's it, sure, look at my site, but someone should explain that you don't need a password fr that, just an account and maybe a friend link.
If an employer demanded control over a site I owned, that would be fighting time. But if I were desperate for a job, I might delete the site.
What I see is that a man is almost always in a bad mood, probably because he has a job, or once did, or something, and the woman never has a bad day (except when her husband hits her), probably because she doesn't have a job. Is that what this is about?
Jerry Lewis
Dick Clark
The Green Hornet & Kato/Van Williams and Bruce Lee
Sammie Davis, Jr.
Jose Jimenez/Bill Dana
***(not sure)
Colonel Klink/Werner Klemperer
Lurch/Ted Cassidy
Don Ho
Santa Claus/Andy Devine
Art Linkletter
Edward G. Robinson
Suzy Knickerbocker (a gimme)
Carpet King (is he a celebrity?)
I don't post anything on the internet that isn't for the public. But my email is different -and personal messages on Facebook that are password-protected are just as private.
So when I first encountered this controversy, I figured maybe employers didn't understand how Facebook worked, but maybe its me. Do they really demand control over your site, or do they just want to monitor what you post? If that's it, sure, look at my site, but someone should explain that you don't need a password fr that, just an account and maybe a friend link.
If an employer demanded control over a site I owned, that would be fighting time. But if I were desperate for a job, I might delete the site.