Untitled Post
49 reptiles in a suitcase? EEK!
49 reptiles in a suitcase? EEK!
Now, the question is do we want to go to the Jazz & Ribfest or the Franklin County Fair tomorrow evening?
I’ve been playing with this template some. I’m trying to get my < $BlogDescription$ > in the little blue corner on the top left and written in white, but since I have no clue what I’m doing, I’m just trying in different places … so far, I think I’ve figured out where to put it…
I decided to change to one of the spiffy new templates from the template contest. I bet I’m going to lose all the comments you kind people have made :(, and the links aren’t on here currently, but I’m working on it. Have a nice day!
I feel bad for all you who come and read my very boring blog. It isn’t that I haven’t wanted to post anything – it’s that I don’t have anything amusing or interesting to say. The Case for Christ kind of got me interested in apologetics, so I thought I’d start slowly. My sister taught…
Jason and I rented Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon tonight. It was a touching movie with breathtaking scenery. I cried. That’s always a good sign. I’m not entirely sure I understood the end or picked up on some of the Chinese subtleties, but I liked the movie very much.
I always forget how much I like Blackball’s superheavydreamscape. This album rocks! My favorites are tracks one through four, but the whole album is really good. Which, reminds me that I bought the newest Sarah Masen album Tuesday (don’t ask how they’re related, the music styles are completely different!) I’m not a big fan of…
While I don’t work for Schottenstein Stores Corporation or Value City Department Stores, I do work for Value City Furniture (we’re all officially separate entities, although we have close ties). This news is causing quite a buzz today.
Some days I’m a big ditz.
I thoroughly enjoyed Strobel’s The Case for Christ. I devoured it over a two day span. The book is not written as a scholarly excercise, (although there are a large number of quotations and citations) rather as a series of interviews with acclaimed scholars. This made the book very readable as there is a great…