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    Within Reach: Joseph Flom

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    Within Reach is a series that outlies the achievements and opportunities of select individuals to display the perseverance that is required to achieve your goals in life. Nothing is presented to you directly, but opportunities are. If you are able to embellish those opportunities you’re able to further your success to ultimately become what it is you have envisioned.

    I’m going to start this series with a prominent New York attorney Joseph Flom. Joseph Flom didn’t grow up rich, or even ‘privileged,’ he grew up poor. He didn’t have all the technological advancements that we have today, and even if he did, he wouldn’t have had access to them. Flom grew up in the Depression, in Brooklyn. He was raised in Borough Park by his parents whom were Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. His father’s job was to sew shoulder pads for woman’s dresses, and his mother did appliqué at home. His family was so poor that they had to move every year, due to the custom of first months free rent at the time, otherwise they couldn’t afford housing.

    Flom took the entrance exam for the Townsend Harris public high school on Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. Known for it’s elite graduates, producing several influential people such as Nobel Prize winners, Pulitzer Prize winners, etc. He was accepted and that was his leading opportunity to become what it is that he wanted, an attorney. After school, he would work, as many young adults do, he pushed a hand truck in the garment district. After graduation he worked during the day, struggling to get by, and attended night school at City College in upper Manhattan for 2 years, before enlisting in the Army.

    After the he served his time in the Army, Flom, with no college degree, applied for and was accepted to Harvard Law School. “I wanted to get into the law since I was six years old,” Flom says, why Harvard accept him, “Why? I wrote them a letter on why I was the answer to sliced bread.” Flom never took notes when he attended Harvard, in the 1940s, Charles Haar, a classmate of Flom’s noted, “He had that quality which we always vaguely subsumed under ‘thinking like a lawyer.’ He had the great capacity for judgement.” Flom was named to the Law Review, an honor reserved for the top of the class.

    During the “hiring season,” the Christmas break of his second year, Flom interviewed with all big New York corporate law firms. At the end of the day he wasn’t hired, it wasn’t because he was capable, it was because of who he was, what he was, and where he was from. If you were not from the right background, the right social class, or the right religion, you weren’t going to be hired by any of Wall Street’s top firms. At that time Wall Street firms were like private clubs all consisting of people that grew up together, or had similar backgrounds and beliefs. Due to this, coming out of law school at that time, you were obligated to join a second-rate, no-name law firm.

    “I was one of two kids in my class at the end of hiring season who didn’t have a job. Then one day, one of my professors said that there are these guys starting a firm. I had a visit with them, and the entire time I met with them, they were telling me what the risks were of going with a firm that didn’t have a client. The more they talked, the more I liked them. So I said, what the hell, I’ll take a chance. They had to scrape together the thirty-six hundred a year, which was the starting salary,” Flom remembered. The firm was started by Marshall Skadden and Leslie Arps, both of which were recently turned down for partner at major Wall Street firms, and John Slate, who worked for Pan Am Airlines. Skadden, Arps, and Slate was started in a small suite atop the Lehman Brothers Building on Wall Street, where Flom was simply an associate. They accepted any work that came in the door.

    At this time, corporate law firms, which were the primary firms on wall street, handled the books behind the top corporations. During this time the major corporate firms didn’t handle litigation, they were solely dedicated to maintaining stocks and keeping corporations compliant with federal regulations. The firms believed that disputes were to be settled in the conference room, not the courtroom. “Among my classmates at Harvard, the thing that bright young guys did was securities work or tax,” a prestigious firm partner remembers. “Those were the distinguished fields. Litigation was for hams, not for serious people. Corporations just didn’t sue each other in those days.”

    The old firms also didn’t want to handle hostile corporate takeovers. It was deemed unethical and scandalous, up until the 1970s, for one company to buy another company with out the agreement of the company being purchased. Most large, prestigious firms on Wall Street wouldn’t touch those deals. This is where Joseph Flom was given his opportunity, the opportunity that will lead to the success of his small firm.

    “The Problem with hostile takeovers is that they were hostile,” says Steven Brill, who founded the trade magazine American Lawyser. “It wasn’t gentlemanly. If your buddy from Princeton is the CEO of Company X, and he’s been coasting for a long time, and some corporate raider shows up and says this company sucks, it makes you uncomfortable. You think, if he goes, then maybe I go too. It’s this whole notion of not upsetting the basic calm and stable order of things.”

    Seeing that none of the top firms would consider these forms of litigation, you can imagine the work that “came in the door” for firms such as Skadden, which Flom worked for. Litigation and “proxy fights,” the legal maneuvers at the center of any hostile takeover. If you have ever seen the movie wall street then you know exactly what it is that proxy fights are. It is where an investor takes interest in a company and tries to get the share holders to grant the investor a “proxy” to vote out the firm’s executives. At this time the only lawyers an investor could find to run the proxy fight is a small firm like Skadden.

    Through out the prestigious firms, it was well known, there was no one better at winning proxy battles than Joseph Flom. After all, when these are the only clients that your firm is capable of obtaining, your experience will prevail. The prestigious firms would call in Flom whenever a corporate raider would target one of their clients. “Flom’s early specialty was proxy fights, and that was not what we did, just like we don’t do matrimonial work,” said Robert Rifkind, a longtime partner at Cravath, Swain and Moore. “And therefore we purported not to know about it. I remember once we had an issue involving a proxy fight, and one of my senior corporate partners said, Well, let’s get Joe in. And he came to a conference room, and we all sat around and described the problem and he told us what to do and he left. And I said, ‘We can do that too, you know.’ And the partner said, ‘No, no, no, you can’t. We’re not going to do that.’ It was just that we didn’t do it.”

    When the next decade came, the tables had turned. It was no longer scandalous to strike, corporate take overs were essentially the wave of the future. In the 1970s it was easier to borrow money, federal regulations were lax, and markets became internationalized. Due to this investors became more aggressive and hostile take-overs became all but common.

    “In 1980, if you went to the Business Roundtable [the association of major American corporate executives] and took surveys about whether hostile takeovers should be allowed, two-thirds would have said no,” Flom said. “Now, the vote would be almost unanimously yes.” This is the time when companies needed to be defended, investors needed legal strategy, and share holders needed formal representation. The amount of money involved with mergers and acquisitions every year on Wall Street increased 2,000 percent, peaking at almost a quarter of a trillion dollars, from the mid-1970s to the end of the 1980s.

    What does this mean for Joseph Flom? It means that his firm will now become the prestigious firm, the firm all the Fortune 500 companies will come to. They need protection, and not only protection, but also someone to lead their strategy to acquire competitors. All the cases that were sent to him by the prestigious firms of his time, because they refused to practice litigation, are now his primary clients. It wasn’t unfortunate that he was refused a position with said firms, it was a blessing.

    “[Prestigious firms] thought the hostile takeovers were beneath contempt until relatively late in the game, and until they decided that, hey, maybe we ought to be in that business, they left me alone,” Flom said. “And once you get the reputation for doing that kind of work, the business comes to you first.”

    Flom took over as managing partner of the Firm in 1954, catapulting the firm into the exponential growth that has made it what it is today. Today Skadden earns over $1 billion in revenue a year with 2,000 attorneys in 23 offices world wide, making it one of the most powerful law firms in the world. For over 30 years Skadden has been the go to firm for Fortune 500 companies for corporate take overs, Joseph Flom is the attorney you want on your side. Flom now lives in a luxurious apartment on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

    “It’s not that those guys were smarter lawyers than anyone else,” Rifkind says. “It’s that they had a skill that they had been working on for years that was suddenly very valuable.”

    As you can see, from this journey of success, you’re downturns can be your strongest points in your success. Did he frown upon not being accepted at a prestigious firm because of who he was, where he was from, or his religious beliefs? No, he didn’t, he in turn accepted a position at a smaller, new to open firm that in the end sits atop all the prestigious firms of their time.

    Think back to my ‘Only the Adaptive Survive’ post. You can see here where it’s highly applicable. Joseph Flom was able to conform to the times and learn practices that generally weren’t becoming. But after the times changed his knowledge and experience in hostile take overs is what ultimately lead to his success and the exponential growth of his law firm. Your burdens aren’t necessarily burdens, rather open doors to a greater success.

    Source: Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell

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    Adrian Mole writer Sue Townsend gets kidney from her son - telegraph.co.uk

    Sue Townsend, who created the character Adrian Mole, has received a kidney from her own son.

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    Reading List

    For Over Break

    - Forever Princess by Meg Cabot

    - The Blonde of the Joke by Bennett Madison

    - A Thouand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini

    - To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee

    - A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess

    - Madam Bovary by Gustave Flaubert

    - Still Alice by Lisa Genova

    - I Know This Much is True by Wally Lamb

    - She’s Come Undone by Wally Lamb

    - Cat on a Hot Tin Roof by Tennessee Williams

    - The Last Summer bye Ann Brashares

    - SUnday at Tifffany’s by James Patterson

    - The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver

    - Ash by Malinda Lo

    - Geek Love by Katherine Dunn

    - Thirteen R3asons Why by Jay Asher

    - The Morgue and Me  by John C. Ford

    - My Mother the Cheerleader by Robert Sharenow

    - Coffeehouse Angel by Suzanne Selfors

    - Either You’re In or You’re In The Way by Logan and Noah Miller

    - The Winter’s Tale by William Shakespeare

    - Ghost Children by Sue Townsend

    When I look at this list it makes me realize how much of a problem I truly have when I go to bookstores, because I keep buying books that I want to read but never ever have the time to read, until now.

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    i'm addicted to the series..

    Actor

    Director

    Producer

    Writer

    Casting

    Production Management

    Art Department

    Editor

    Music

    Sound

    Camera, Film & Tape

    Wardrobe, Hair & Makeup

    Engineering, Electrical & Grips

    Below The Line

    Construction

    Accounting

    Props

  6. block 1 note reblog

    There are those who say that Leicester is shit, and they may have a point. However, we do have Sue Townsend, who’s latest Adrian Mole novel has been recently published to great acclaim. I was particularly tickled to read in this one that Mole’s mother is writing an entirely spurious misery memoir with the title A Girl Called Shit.

    Brilliant as the Mole books are, I had assumed that they wouldn’t travel well, being so firmly located as they are in their Leicester setting and commenting so much on events in Britain. For that reason, I was gratified to read this rave review of the new book from Canadian writer Cory Doctorow.

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    Slice Solutions 9 x 9 Inch Brownie Pan Set

    Slice Solutions 9 x 9 Inch Brownie Pan Set Reviews

    Read More From Here Now
    Pssssst!!! The real secret to perfect brownies is the Slice Solutions Brownie Pan. This one-of-a-kind pan uses an ingenious metal divider to pre-slice brownies as they bake. The 3-piece non-stick set makes baking brownies quick and easy with perfect results every time. Simply pour batter into the pan, insert the divider, bake and serve. There is no need to use a knife. Not only does the Slice Solutions® Brownie Pan create flawless and uniformly sized brownies, but thanks to the metal divider, each brownie can be customized with nuts, candies, or any toppings or decorations desired! The versatile pan is also ideal for making cornbread, crispy cereal treats and any other baked bar treats. Readmore Technical Details - Create 12 perfect brownies every time with the Slice Solutions Brownie Pan
    - Simply pour batter into the pan, insert the divider, bake, lift and serve
    - Non-stick coating for easy release and removal of brownies. Dishwasher safe.
    - Set contains a 9 x 9 inch baking pan, removable Lifting insert, and divider
    - Great for brownies, cornbread, crispy cereal treats, and any other baked bar treats
    See more technical details

     “Perfectly square” 2009-10-30
    By K. Hodges
    It works as it should. I love the perfectly sliced brownies. I can’t wait to try other goodies in it.


     “It Works” 2009-10-22
    By Michael A. Aspy
    I was somewhat sceptical, but the brownies and corn bread have come out perfectly.This pan delivers as promised.


     “Simple, yet elegant!” 2009-10-09
    By John Russo (Chester, New Hampshire United States)
    Title says it. It actually works and cleans easily. No more info is needed.


     “Slice Solutions” 2009-09-19
    By Janice Ruth Smith (Columbia Heights, MN United States)
    This is a great pan! I was eager to try it and found it to be even better than I expected. Be sure to spray all the surfaces before pouring in the batter, is the only caution I have.

    Thank you, Amazon!


     “Brownie Pan” 2009-08-26
    By Sue Ann Townsend (Coatesville, PA United States)
    I used this pan for the first time and I really like the idea that the brownies are pre-cut when done baking. I’m also very pleased with the ease of cleaning this pan.


    Images Product

    Read more Slice Solutions 9 x 9 Inch Brownie Pan Set
    You can see more from
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    Adrian Mole: The Prostrate Years -- Sue Townsend's comic novels of recent history turn dark and sweet
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    Even inventariseren

    Wat ik wil:

    - Een mooi, functioneel Wacom tekentablet;
    - Een polaroid- en een spiegelreflexcamera; 
    - Winterkleding (waarom koop ik superdunne, chiffon jurkjes met spaghettibandjes?)
    - Een overload aan mooie, unieke accessoires;
    - Een enorme creatieve boost en de tijd om deze te uiten;
    - Klaar zijn met mijn vwo en in Amsterdam studeren. Of op zijn minst vakantie.

    Wat ik lees en heb gelezen (dit jaar):

    Isabel Allende - Portret in sepia
    Stephen Chbosky - The perks of being a wallflower
    Anna Enquist - Het meesterstuk
    Marianne Fredriksson - Simon
    Jostein Gaarder - De wereld van Sofie
    Khaled Hosseini - Duizend schitterende zonnen
    Khaled Hosseini - De vliegeraar
    Keri Hulme - Kerewin
    Arthur Japin - De zwarte met het witte hart
    Arthur Japin - Een schitterend gebrek
    Kluun - Komt een vrouw bij de dokter
    Kluun - De Weduwnaar
    Jacqui Lofthouse - Een perfecte glimlach
    Harry Mulisch - De ontdekking van de hemel
    Harry Mulisch - De procedure
    Connie Palmen - De vriendschap
    Connie Palmen - I.M.
    E. Annie Proulx - Scheepsberichten
    Richard Russo - Brug der zuchten
    Harry F. Saint - Herinneringen van een onzichtbare man
    Sue Townsend - The Growing Pains of Adrian Mole (EN)
    Sue Townsend - The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, aged 13¾ (EN)
    Cynthia Voigt - De Tillermans
    Lauren Weisberger - Chanel chic
    Lauren Weisberger - The devil wears Prada
    Irvin D. Yalom - De Schopenhauer-kuur
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón - De schaduw van de wind
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón - Het spel van de engel
    Floortje Zwigtman - Schijnbewegingen
    Floortje Zwigtman - Tegenspel

    (En ja, hiermee heb ik onbewust mijn boekenlijst voor dit jaar al afgewerkt, wat heel fijn is)

    Wat ik luister:

    Heel veel:
    Adele
    Feist
    Jack Johnson
    Kate Nash
    The Kooks
    Lily Allen
    Pete Philly & Perquisite
    Red Hot Chili Peppers
    Room Eleven

    Ook:
    Amy Winehouse
    Arctic Monkeys
    Coldplay
    Corinne Bailey Rae
    Eels
    A Fine Frenzy
    Gorillaz
    John Mayer
    Krezip
    KT Tunstall
    Kyteman
    Lykke Li
    N.E.R.D
    Nujabes
    Oren Lavie
    Stevie Ann

    Bij vlagen:
    Beef, Beirut, Bon Iver, Cocoon, De Jeugd van Tegenwoordig, Death Cab for Cutie, Gabriel Rios, Gnarls Barkley, Kaiser Chiefs, Kings of Convenience, Madcon, Paolo Nutini, Regina Spektor, Relax en Tingsek.

    Dan heb ik nog soms buien van Gare du Nord, Jamiroquai, Air, Air Traffic, Ane Brun, Anouk, Aqualung, Arts the Beatdoctor, The Asteroids Galaxy Tour, The Beatles, Ben Harper, The Bird and the Bee, Björk, Chairlift, Coconut Records, Daft Punk, De La Soul, Dizzee Rascal, Duffy, Ella Fitzgerald, Fleet Foxes, Gym Class Heroes, India Arie, Ingrid Michaelson, Jamie T, Jason Mraz, John Legend, Morningwood, Oasis, Outkast, Racoon, Razorlight, Rodrigo y Gabriela, The Wombats en Yann Tiersen.

    Wat er in mijn agenda staat:

    22-10: feestje L. & L.
    24-10: Amsterdam

    28-10: Koken met S.
    30-10: Feestje van G.
    31-10: thuiswedstrijd tegen Leeuwarden
    31-10: Bij Vriendje eten en slapen (?)
    02-11: begin toetsweek
    07-11: uitwedstrijd Lemmer
    09-11: einde toetsweek
    11-11: Studiebeurs Rotterdam
    17-11: Tekenexcursie Amsterdam

  10. block 2 notes reblog

    ha a http://sub.sierraforce.com/media//fun/ronesz/cikkek/ mappaban talalhato osszes posztot fognam,es osszeszerkesztve kiadnam, szerintem en lennek a hazai sue townsend

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    Che and the Television Series

    I haven’t seen Grey’s Anatomy in a long while. I stopped watching the show ever since I realized how screwed up the doctors were. I know that is the premise of the whole story but it doesn’t have to be sad and depressing all the time, right?

    And it’s seriously not just Grey’s Anatomy. I think it happens to all the shows after some time. It’s as if the writers stopped thinking or they have nothing to share anymore and it gets tiring to see the characters waste their great storylines and end up just having sex with one another.

    It happened in Beverly Hills 90210. Seriously. I know Brenda’s a bitch in life but cutting Shannen Doherty must be their biggest mistake. After that, it just fell apart. So did Melrose Place. I can’t believe I watched that series when I was like 9 or 10. I mean, first Heather Locklear was screwing Andrew Shue and then Thomas Calabro who’s screwing Marcia Cross and whoever they got next.

    Dawson’s Creek got tiring after hooking up with one another. I think the only thing left for them was if Dawson hooked up with Pacey or if Joey hooked up with Jen. 7th Heaven was weird. How come a very religious pastor can’t keep his family together? It seems that the kids are rivaling each other who screwed up the most. Everwood got tiring. Especially when Ephram and Amy messed up.

    And then there’s Charmed. When they killed Prue, I just knew it will never be the same again. And for Buffy, by the time Angel split for LA, it just wasn’t the same. I don’t even get why Spike’s a loved character. (But I watched it ‘til the end because I really liked it.) Smallville was great. But they ran out of good stories to tell and it wasn’t even Superman anymore. I thought bringing Lois Lane to Smallville was a major desperate move. And Making Lana and Lex together? Ugh. Sick!

    Then The O.C., classic example. It was like a meteor bursting into the top but running out of flames easily. It was going nowhere. By the time Marissa Cooper was screwing up, and hooking up with Cam Gigandet’s character, the show lost its humor, drama and class. When they killed her, they killed the show. And making Taylor Townsend, Ryan Atwood’s love interest? Insane.

    One Tree Hill wasn’t as hot as The O.C., but at least it stuck to it’s story a little longer. When Peyton and Lucas got back together, it stopped being fun. I wanted the chase but it got boring eventually. And now they cut the stars of the show. And we’re left with Robert Buckley… who might make up for Chad Michael Murray and Hilarie Burton’s lost because of his hotness.

    Heroes got tiring but I decided to watch again because I realized that it’s still relevant. It got boring for quite some time but I got over it and started watching again. I love Sylar. Chuck. I never got tired of that. Which is why they have to put it back on, NOW. I love Chuck, and who doesn’t?

    I am having high hopes for Gossip Girl. So far, it’s not as good as last season. But I hope my love for Blair and Nate—and now Chuck, too—will suffice. 90210, I am very interested since we don’t really see much of an anti-hero in television. The main character is a bitch and the supposed bitch isn’t sometimes a bitch…

    The new Melrose is pretty good so far. But I know once they start hooking with each other, it’ll just annoy me. The Vampire Diaries is good, except that it painfully reminds me of Twilight. Some scenes totally resemble the horrible film I saw but who can resist Paul Wesley and Ian Somerhalder? Seriously!

    GLEE is my new favorite. I love, love, love the new show. It’s fresh, exciting and fun. I love how crazy it is. I love how Jane Lynch always gets that kind of a hard-ass bitch, in Role Models and the 40 Year Old Virgin and now she’s immortalizing such character as Sue Sylvester! And how can you not love a show when the football team is dancing to Single Ladies by Beyonce.

    I’m watching Mercy, which is way better than Grey’s Anatomy. It has Michelle Tractenberg in it… which means Georgina won’t be in NYU for long. The Beautiful Life is interesting. I just hope these shows will keep it up. I have high hopes, but I know some of them won’t really survive a year or two. I’m just keeping my fingers crossed.

    What do you think?

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    E-mail

    From: Margaret Bennett
    Date: Friday 22 August 2009 3.40pm
    To: David Thorne
    Subject: computer room

    Hello David

    I tried to call you but your phone is off. Just letting you know that Seb bought a flash drive to school yesterday and copied a game onto the school computers which is against the school rules and he has been banned from using the computer room for the rest of the term.

    Sincerely, Margaret



    From: David Thorne
    Date: Monday 24 August 2009 9.16am
    To: Margaret Bennett
    Subject: Re: computer room

    Dear Maggie,

    Thankyou for your email. I am not answering my mobile phone at the moment as I am experiencing iPhone envy and every second spent using my Nokia is like being trapped in a loveless marriage. Where you stay together for the kids. And the kids all have iPhones. I was not aware that my son taking software to school was in breach of school rules. Although the game is strategic and public domain, not to mention that it was I who copied and gave it to him, I agree that banning him from access to the computers at school is an appropriate punishment. Especially considering his enthusiasm for the subject. Also, though physical discipline is not longer administered in the public school system, it would probably be appropriate in this instance if nobody is watching. I know from experience that he can take a punch.

    Regards, David.



    From: Margaret Bennett
    Date: Tuesday 25 August 2009 10.37am
    To: David Thorne
    Subject: Re: Re: computer room

    David

    We would never strike a student and whether the software is pirated or not is not the issue. He denied having the drive which means he knew he shouldn’t have it here then it was found in his bag so I feel the punishment is suitable.

    Margaret



    From: David Thorne
    Date: Tuesday 25 August 2009 11.04am
    To: Margaret Bennett
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: computer room

    Dear Maggie,

    Yes, I agree. Education and access to the tools necessary for such should always come secondary to discipline. When I was young, discipline was an accepted part of each school day. Once, when I coloured outside the lines, I was forced to stand in the playground with a sign around my neck that read ‘non-conformist’ while the other children pelted me with rubble from the recently torched school library. Apparently a copy of Biggles had been found behind a filing cabinet. Another time, because I desperately wanted a Battlestar Galactica jacket like Apollo in the television series, using brown house paint from the shed at home, I painted my denim jacket and used Araldite to attach brass door hinges as clasps. Feeling that it was an excellent representation and despite the oil based paint still being soaking wet, I wore it to school the next day. Unfortunately, the paint dried while I was sitting in Mrs Bowman’s English class, securing me to the chair. After the school handyman cut me free, I was sent to the principal for damaging school property. My punishment was to scrape wads of chewing gum off the bottom of every chair in the school after hours. It took several weeks and it was during this lonely time that I created my imaginary friend Mr Wrigley. During class, when the teacher was not looking, we would pass each other notes regarding the merits of disciplinary action and how one day we would own real Battlestar Galactica jackets.

    Also, if you happen to see Seb eating anything over the next few weeks, please remove the food from him immediately. He forgot to feed his turtle last week and I feel a month without food will help him understand both the importance of being a responsible pet owner and the effects of malnutrition.

    Regards, David.



    From: Margaret Bennett
    Date: Tuesday 25 August 2009 4.10pm
    To: David Thorne
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: computer room

    David

    I hope you are not being serious about the food but I am forwarding your email to the principal as per school policy.

    Margaret



    From: David Thorne
    Date: Wednesday 26 August 2009 11.18am
    To: Margaret Bennett
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: computer room

    Dear Maggie,

    Rest assured I would not really withhold nutritional requirements from any child. Except maybe that one that starred in the Home Alone movies. I read somewhere that a healthy breakfast helps concentration and have found, since replacing my usual diet of nicotine with froot loops, I am able to move small objects with my mind. Just this morning Seb and I were discussing the importance of good nutrition which is why, if you check in his school bag, you will find a bag of rice, vegetables, a wok and a camp stove. The gas bottle can be a little tricky but has instructions printed on the side so he should be alright. Please remind him to stand well back and cover his face while igniting as the hose is worn and has developed a small leak.

    Also, I am not sure what you are teaching in your classroom but Seb came home the other week talking about a healthy eating pyramid. I had to explain to him that pyramids are made of stone and therefore not edible so I would appreciate you not filling his head with these fanciful notions.

    Regards, David.



    From: Margaret Bennett
    Date: Wednesday 26 August 2009 2.05pm
    To: David Thorne
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: computer room

    David

    I have no idea what your point is. I will speak to the principal about the ban but you have to understand that only government approved software is allowed on the computers and Seb knew this rule.

    Margaret



    From: David Thorne
    Date: Wednesday 26 August 2009 2.17pm
    To: Margaret Bennett
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: computer room

    Dear Maggie,

    I understand the need for conformity. Without a concise set of rules to follow we would probably all have to resort to common sense. Discipline is the key to conformity and it is important that we learn not to question authority at an early age. Just this week I found a Sue Townsend novel in Seb’s bag that I do not believe is on the school approved reading list. Do not concern yourself about it making its way to the school yard though as we attended a community book burning last night. Although one lady tried to ruin the atmosphere with comments regarding Mayan codices and the Alexandrian Libraries, I mentioned to the High Magus that I had overheard her discussing spells to turn the village cow’s milk sour and the mob took care of the rest.

    Regards, David.



    From: Margaret Bennett
    Date: Thursday 28 August 2009 11.56am
    To: David Thorne
    Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: computer room

    David,

    I have spoken to the principal and in this instance we will lift the ban.

    Margaret

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    ready time.

    Until one am.

    Going to read an hour of GQ, and then ‘True Confessions of Adrian Albert Mole’.

    Sue Townsend is literally my baby.

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    Books I’ve read (or re-read) so far this summer.

    I have also been reading Sue Townsend’s Adrian Mole series in preperation for the new ‘Adrian Mole: The Prostrate Years’ being published on the 5th November. So far I have read the first two, ‘The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4’ and ‘The Growing Pains of Adrian Mole’, giving me five more to read before the next is published. It’s not going to happen given the huge list of ‘Books I Need to Read’ that has developed over the past three years.

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    Now I know I am an intellectual. I saw Malcolm Muggeridge on the television last night, and I understood nearly every word. It all adds up. A bad home, poor diet, not liking punk. I think I will join the library and see what happens. It is a pity there aren’t any more intellectuals living around here. Mr. Lucas wears corduroy trousers, but he’s an insurance man.
    Sue Townsend, The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, aged 13 3/4 (Rereading this as I have just ordered the sequel. Every page is guffaw-out-loud hilarious.)
  16. block reblog

    Sue Townsend Lake, La Grange, Illinois, 1929.

    Caption on back of photo by Louise Prichard says: “My Cousin Sue in my grandmothers’ wedding dress. 1869 - 1929.”

  17. block reblog
    Books that I have read recently:

    The Subterreneans/Pic - Jack Kerouac. Subs - 5/10 I couldn’t get into it too much, it was a bit too stream of conciousness for my liking. Pic - 7/10 Hilariously racist but quite a nice a nice story about two brothers who only have each other. I liked it.

    Venus in Furs - Leopold Von Sacher-Masoch - 8/10. Easy to read despite first being published in 1835, this book was great. The idea of Masochism comes from this book about a man who is so devoted to a woman he becomes her slave for a year in the hope she will marry him at the end. She isn’t too keen on the idea at first but she gets well into it by the end. Lots of complaining about how cruel women are wondering why she doesn’t love him ensues but really it was Severin’s fault all along.

    Ska’d For Life - Horace Panter - 6/10. This is the bass player from the Specials’ autobiography. I probably wouldn’t normally read this if it hadn’t been given to me but it was enjoyable. Some good stories about the band and lots of Coventry referneces which I got! Yeah!

    Number 10 - Sue Townsend - 7/10 The Prime Minister goes under cover in drag to get back in touch with the general public. Quite funny, but everyone knows Townsend should just write more Adrian Mole and be done with it.

    High Fidelity - Nick Hornby - 150/10. The best book ever, complaining about girls, lists about music, musical snobbery, Terminator 2 on VHS. It doesn’t get better than this. Joseph Croot (apologies!) reccomends a course of High Fidelity followed by The Game as the essential break up remedy. I wouldn’t go that far but it is amazing when you’re feeling sad. Sometimes I think I’d be happier if I just organised me record collection into autobiographical order and never left the house safe in the knowledge that if I wanted to know where Rumours was I’d have to remember buying it to someone but not giving it to them for personal reasons.

    Now I’m reading number9dream by David Mitchell which seems good so far. These are some of my opinions, I have lots of them that I like to inflict on people. See: The Da Vinchi Code rant of 2005.

    xxx

  18. block reblog
    Cary Grant Movies

    All of the movies I have seen are in bold. I am going back and trying to see as many new ones as I can.

    1. Walk Don’t Run (1966) …. Sir William Rutland
      … aka Walk, Don’t Run (USA: promotional title)

    2. Father Goose (1964) …. Walter Christopher Eckland

    3. Charade (1963) …. Peter Joshua

    4. That Touch of Mink (1962) …. Philip Shayne

    5. The Grass Is Greener (1960) …. Victor Rhyall, Earl

    6. Operation Petticoat (1959) …. Lt. Cmdr. Matt T. Sherman

    7. North by Northwest (1959) …. Roger O. Thornhill…aka Alfred Hitchcock’s North by Northwest (USA: complete title)

    8. Houseboat (1958) …. Tom Winters

    9. Indiscreet (1958) …. Philip Adams

    10. Kiss Them for Me (1957) …. Cmdr. Andy Crewson

    11. The Pride and the Passion (1957) …. Anthony

    12. An Affair to Remember (1957) …. Nickie Ferrante… aka Leo McCarey’s An Affair to Remember (USA: complete title)

    13. To Catch a Thief (1955) …. John Robie
      … aka Alfred Hitchcock’s To Catch a Thief (USA: complete title)

    14. Dream Wife (1953) …. Clemson Reade

    15. Monkey Business (1952) …. Dr. Barnaby Fulton
      … aka Be Your Age
      … aka Howard Hawks’ Monkey Business (USA: complete title)

    16. Room for One More (1952) …. George ‘Poppy’ Rose
      … aka The Easy Way

    17. People Will Talk (1951) …. Dr. Noah Praetorius

    18. Crisis (1950) …. Dr. Eugene Norland Ferguson

    19. I Was a Male War Bride (1949) …. Capt. Henri Rochard
      … aka Howard Hawks’ I Was a Male War Bride (USA: complete title)
      … aka I Was a Male War Bride (Australia)
      … aka You Can’t Sleep Here (UK)

    20. Every Girl Should Be Married (1948) …. Dr. Madison W. Brown

    21. Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (1948) …. Jim Blandings

    22. The Bishop’s Wife (1947) …. Dudley

    23. The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (1947) …. Dick
      … aka Bachelor Knight (UK)

    24. Notorious (1946) …. T.R. Devlin… aka Alfred Hitchcock’s Notorious (USA: complete title)

    25. Night and Day (1946) …. Cole Porter < Seen part of this movie>

    26. None But the Lonely Heart (1944) …. Ernie Mott

    27. Arsenic and Old Lace (1944) …. Mortimer Brewster
      … aka Frank Capra’s ‘Arsenic and Old Lace’ (USA: complete title)

    28. Once Upon a Time (1944) …. Jerry Flynn

    29. Destination Tokyo (1943) …. Capt. Cassidy

    30. Mr. Lucky (1943) …. Joe Adams aka Joe Bascopolous

    31. Once Upon a Honeymoon (1942) …. Patrick ‘Pat’ O’Toole

    32. The Talk of the Town (1942) …. Leopold Dilg – Joseph
      … aka George Stevens’ The Talk of the Town (USA: complete title)

    33. Suspicion (1941) …. Johnnie Asgarth

    34. Penny Serenade (1941) …. Roger Adams

    35. The Philadelphia Story (1940) …. C.K. Dexter Haven

    36. The Howards of Virginia (1940) …. Matt Howard
      … aka The Tree of Liberty (UK)

    37. My Favorite Wife (1940) …. Nick

    38. His Girl Friday (1940) …. Walter Burns
      … aka Howard Hawks’ His Girl Friday (USA: complete title)

    39. In Name Only (1939) …. Alec Walker

    40. Only Angels Have Wings (1939) …. Geoff Carter
      … aka Howard Hawks’ Only Angels Have Wings (USA: complete title)

    41. Gunga Din (1939) …. Sgt. Archibald Cutter

    42. Holiday (1938) …. John ‘Johnny’ Case
      … aka Free to Live (UK)
      … aka Unconventional Linda (UK: reissue title)

    43. Bringing Up Baby (1938) …. Dr. David Huxley

    44. The Awful Truth (1937) …. Jerry Warriner

    45. The Toast of New York (1937) …. Nicholas ‘Nick’ Boyd

    46. Topper (1937) …. George Kerby

    47. When You’re in Love (1937) …. Jimmy Hudson
      … aka For You Alone (UK)

    48. Wedding Present (1936) …. Charlie

    49. The Amazing Quest of Ernest Bliss (1936) …. Ernest Bliss
      … aka Riches and Romance
      … aka Romance and Riches (USA)
      … aka The Amazing Adventure (USA: reissue title)
      … aka The Amazing Quest

    50. Suzy (1936) …. Andre

    51. Big Brown Eyes (1936) …. Det. Sgt. Danny Barr

    52. Sylvia Scarlett (1935) …. Jimmy Monkley

    53. The Last Outpost (1935) …. Michael Andrews

    54. Wings in the Dark (1935) …. Ken Gordon

    55. Enter Madame (1935) …. Gerald Fitzgerald

    56. Ladies Should Listen (1934) …. Julian De Lussac

    57. Kiss and Make-Up (1934) …. Dr. Maurice Lamar

    58. Born to Be Bad (1934) …. Malcolm Trevor

    59. Thirty Day Princess (1934) …. Porter Madison III

    60. Alice in Wonderland (1933) …. The Mock Turtle

    61. I’m No Angel (1933) …. Jack Clayton

    62. Gambling Ship (1933) …. Ace Corbin

    63. The Eagle and the Hawk (1933) …. Henry Crocker

    64. The Woman Accused (1933) …. Jeffrey Baxter

    65. She Done Him Wrong (1933) …. Capt. Cummings

    66. Madame Butterfly (1932) …. Lieutenant B.F. Pinkerton

    67. Hot Saturday (1932) …. Romer Sheffield

    68. Blonde Venus (1932) …. Nick Townsend

    69. Devil and the Deep (1932) …. Lieutenant Jaeckel

    70. Merrily We Go to Hell (1932) …. Charlie Baxter ‘DeBrion’
      … aka Merrily We Go to __ (UK)

    71. Singapore Sue (1932) (uncredited) …. First sailor

    72. Sinners in the Sun (1932) …. Ridgeway

    73. This Is the Night (1932) …. Stephen

  19. block reblog

    I’ve decided to list some of my favourite books.

    Here we go.

    1. American God’s- Neil Gaiman

    2. The Five People You Meet In Heaven- Mitch Albom

    3. Love in the Present Tense -Catherine Hyde Ryan

    4. A Walk In The Woods- Bill Bryson

    5. High Fidelity- Nick Hornby

    6. The Graveyard Book- Neil Gaiman

    7. Join Me- Danny Wallace

    8. The Truth- Terry Pratchett

    9. Fight Club- Chuck Palahniuk

    10. Harry Potter and The Half Blood Prince- J.K Rowling

    11. Anansi Boys- Neil Gaiman

    12. Neverwhere- Neil Gaiman

    13. Dead Famous-  Ben Elton

    14. The Assisination of Marilyn Monroe- Donald H. Wolfe

    15. Post Office- Charles Bukowski

    16. The Secret Diary Of Adrian Mole aged 13 and 3/4- Sue Townsend

  20. block reblog

    “How many times do I have to tell you, Adrian, I don’t need to read another book.  Once you’re read Jonathon Livingstone Seagull, every book ever published is redundant.”

    His voice choked up, as it always does when talking about Jonathon.  “That seagull pushed himself to the limit, Adrian.  And it killed him.”

    - Adrian Mole and the Weapons of Mass Destruction, by Sue Townsend

  21. block reblog
    GOP Pledges To Fight Spitzer Plan of Driver&#39;s Lic. For Illegals


    Protestors rally Monday, Oct. 22 at the Capitol against driver’s licenses for illegal immigrants. (Philip Kamrass / Times Union)


    County clerk sues DMV; opposing bill passes in Senate as GOP pledges to fight Spitzer plan

    Lawsuit filed as pressure increases
    times union.com…for complete article

    ALBANY

    Opponents of Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s plan to allow illegal immigrants to gain driver’s licenses turned up the pressure on the first-term Democrat on Monday, with Rensselaer County’s elected clerk filing a private lawsuit, Assembly and Senate Republicans threatening taxpayer-funded litigation and several hundred citizens rallying against the governor’s “unilateral” act.

    “We are going to do everything that we can to keep that from happening,” said Senate Majority Leader Joseph L. Bruno, R-Brunswick, in supporting a bill passed Monday night to derail the governor’s action.

    Rensselaer County Clerk Frank Merola, a Republican, sued the state Department of Motor Vehicles in Albany County in an effort to block the governor’s policy and, as Merola told demonstrators on the Capitol steps, “to stop this nonsense.”

    “The governor is not listening to the people; perhaps he may listen to the courts,” Merola said. “New York residents have stated loudly and clearly that we are not in favor of giving licenses to illegal aliens and all we get from the governor are lectures on how we are wrong, and that if we were as smart as he was, we would understand and support this policy,” Merola said.

    Spitzer, who met privately with Democratic lawmakers, some of whom also dislike the directive, insists it is legal and seemed undeterred by the heavy criticism and a recent poll showing more than 70 percent of New Yorkers dislike his licensing plan. He said he governs according to principle, not polls.

    “That is part of the discourse we have on tough issues and that’s wonderful, as it should be,” Spitzer said. “Some of the rhetoric that has been imposed and brought into this issue is not only overheated but … counterproductive.”

    Some of Spitzer’s Democratic allies in the Senate minority and Assembly majority portrayed him as showing leadership amid fear-mongering and an undercurrent of racism.


    Wild Thing’s comment……..

    Assemblyman David Townsend, R-Rome, said the Spitzer initiative is part of a conspiracy to get illegal immigrants registered as voters in time to vote for Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., next year in the presidential primary and general election.

    That is EXACTLY what this sham is…a huge voting bloc for Hillary.

    “”A driver’s license is not a ticket to voting,” Spitzer said”

    He’s lying through his teeth. A license is all you need to sign up to vote with motor voter. Spitzer is such lying, arrogant, jerk.