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No, no, no. One complaint per table is all, unless you want them to spit in the food. Let me tell you a story about George Jean Nathan, America’s great drama critic. Nathan was the tightest man who ever lived, even tighter than Charles Chaplin. And he lived for 40 years in the Hotel Royalton, which is across from the Algonquin. He never tipped anybody in the Royalton, not even when they brought the breakfast, and not at Christmastime. After about ten years of never getting tipped, the room-service waiter peed slightly in his tea. Everybody in New York knew it but him. The waiters hurried across the street and told the waiters at Algonquin, who were waiting to see when it would finally dawn on him what he was drinking! And as the years went by, there got to be more and more urine and less and less tea. And it was a great pleasure for us in the theater to look at a leading critic and know that he was full of piss. And I, with my own ears, heard him at the ‘21’ complaining, saying, “Why can’t I get tea here as good as it is at the Royalton?” That’s when I fell on the floor, you know.

Orson Welles on Complaining about service

Maybe Klein didn’t know any of this was going on because, as Tancredi points out, “these [Humanist] groups have no tax exempt status and therefore can’t exactly afford to have the t-shirts for everyone to wear so that you know when they are out in force during a volunteer effort.”

Or maybe it’s because we’re not parading the fact that we’re helping because we’re too busy… helping.

Maybe Klein didn’t know any of this was going on because, as Tancredi points out, “these [Humanist] groups have no tax exempt status and therefore can’t exactly afford to have the t-shirts for everyone to wear so that you know when they are out in force during a volunteer effort.”

Or maybe it’s because we’re not parading the fact that we’re helping because we’re too busy… helping.

Something, Something, Humility …. http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friendlyatheist/2013/06/23/time-cover-story-wrongly-attacks-atheists-for-not-helping-out-victims-of-oklahoma-tornadoes/

EVERLAST WILL BE LIVE AT NORMA JEAN’S

THURSDAY JULY 11, 2013

TICKETS ARE $25 ADVANCE

TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE AT NORMA JEAN’S

OR ONLINE HERE!

NO TICKETS WILL BE SHIPPED!

PRINT OFF YOUR RECEIPT. THIS IS YOUR TICKET!

A SHIPPING FEE WILL APPEAR! THIS IS SIMPLY WHAT

PAYPAL CHARGES TO USE THEIR SERVICE!

EVERLAST WILL BE LIVE AT NORMA JEAN’S

THURSDAY JULY 11, 2013

TICKETS ARE $25 ADVANCE

TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE AT NORMA JEAN’S

OR ONLINE HERE!

NO TICKETS WILL BE SHIPPED!

PRINT OFF YOUR RECEIPT. THIS IS YOUR TICKET!

A SHIPPING FEE WILL APPEAR! THIS IS SIMPLY WHAT

PAYPAL CHARGES TO USE THEIR SERVICE!

http://normajeans.ca/anm/anmviewer.asp?a=1155&print=yes

I’m starting to think the Google Glass Explorer program might be less about testing hardware, and more about testing people.

Gabe – who is probably correct

I’m starting to think the Google Glass Explorer program might be less about testing hardware, and more about testing people.

Gabe – who is probably correct

“Shockingly high” numbers of bird and bat deaths caused by one of Canada’s biggest wind farms should serve as a warning to planners of other projects that may be built in crucial wildlife zones, one of the country’s key conservation groups says.

The 86 huge turbines on Wolfe Island, just outside Kingston, Ont., began to produce power about a year ago, and an on-going count of bird and bats that have been killed by the blades has been conducted since then.

A consultant’s report covering the period between July and December of 2009 was released recently, indicating that 602 birds and 1,270 bats were killed by the turbines over that stretch. While the report says the numbers of dead birds and bats are similar to other wind farms in North America, Ottawa-based environmental advocacy group Nature Canada says the figures are actually surprisingly large and represent a significant threat to several endangered species.

602 birds in 6 months? Holy Cow; I hope they don’t count how many birds are killed by CARS each year…. it’s a bit more than 602 in six months

“Shockingly high” numbers of bird and bat deaths caused by one of Canada’s biggest wind farms should serve as a warning to planners of other projects that may be built in crucial wildlife zones, one of the country’s key conservation groups says.

The 86 huge turbines on Wolfe Island, just outside Kingston, Ont., began to produce power about a year ago, and an on-going count of bird and bats that have been killed by the blades has been conducted since then.

A consultant’s report covering the period between July and December of 2009 was released recently, indicating that 602 birds and 1,270 bats were killed by the turbines over that stretch. While the report says the numbers of dead birds and bats are similar to other wind farms in North America, Ottawa-based environmental advocacy group Nature Canada says the figures are actually surprisingly large and represent a significant threat to several endangered species.

602 birds in 6 months? Holy Cow; I hope they don’t count how many birds are killed by CARS each year…. it’s a bit more than 602 in six months

Collisions with wind turbines account for about one-tenth of a percent of all “unnatural” bird deaths in the United States each year. And of all bird deaths, 30 percent are due to natural causes, like baby birds falling from nests [source: AWEA]. So why the widespread misconception that labels wind turbines “bird-o-matics”? I­t all starts with California, raptors and the thousands of old turbines that make up the Altamont Pass wind farm.

so there