Traci Lords Story (X-Rated Ambition)
The III. chief class contains 4 hulks.
The armament of the navy consists of Uchatius and Krupp guns, the former of which were made at home.
The contingent of the navy is furnished mostly by the three supply districts of the sea-coast countries. The period of service, is twelve years—four in active service, live in the reserve, and three in the sea defence (Seeivehr). The crews are combined into a sailor corps, which is again resolved into two depots of six companies each. The peace establishment amounts to 6890 men, which is increased in war to 13,752. The corps of sea officers, including the midshipmen, numbers 533 officers and cadets in peace, 757 in war.
The training of the crews—and these are. on the average, schooled seamen—for service on the war ships takes place in the depots, which the sailors afterwards leave for the ships appointed to service. For volunteer youths there is an apprentice school-ship and a mechanical school. Only the artillery and torpedo crews are trained on the various school-ships. The midshipmen are also prepared here for their duties, while the naval academy for higher scientific instruction is at the service of the officers.
The Austro-Hungarian navy does not have foreign stations, yet regular training voyages are made outside of the Mediterranean Sea.
IT matters little to the winged sprite
That flits and flits the clustered stars among,
What fate befell the useless vesture flung
So sadly earthward at the time of flight.
Eyes dazzled by a sudden flood of light
Cannot look into darkness: hymns are sunjr
In vain for spirit ears, on which has rung
God's perfect music, heard at last aright.
Yet for this worn-out garment seems more fit
Than beak of Parsee bird, or wormy shroud,
Or grinning ages in Egyptian pit,
A chant of merry fire tongues singing loud,
While deft flame fingers shall unravel it.
And slim wind fingers weave it into cloud.
Jesus,Remember when I got the juice?
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I am writing this account to avoid possible loss of feeling from my soon to be day full of popping cherry socials, being officially classified the Nation's first and only driver for socialized medicine courtesy of our current administration and Head of State, President Barrack Obama, trip to Costco, verbal agreement in front of my home to buy 24 brown eggs repaid when food learns (tonight or tomorrow), formal offer of cooperative life in same global small yet undetermined participation in undetermined bondage--reciprocity unspecified to maintain greater good available as supplement, suggested today with immediate, rigorous exorcise, adopted, from sluggish, muddy hiking-fast experiment where a stream fordable--world's largest Redwood windows (only packed dress shoes), follow-up in person rejection (nothing more than additional opportunity), Six Rivers copy of resume--uneven, semi-apocryphal--delivered by hand, recovery application employment, filliped, today--middle certain nervous breakdown decision's end, transportation bank, appointment Friday 11:15 on arrival, McKinleyville (closed for lunch, or smoking last strain medical marijuana under great threat found in broadcast news on radio), filed CV through mailbox ...everything from inclusion--Herculean time barely 15:30.Tomorrow, hunting (to last), looking well-delay (not my worry), resumption activities, except unforeseen disasters on curtain stands towering majestic redwood bit-through whispers, supernatural life mist discovered (1991), awnings, entire ecosystem walks 300 feet...miraculously contain sea-life!
La fascination de Lindsay Lohan pour Marilyn Monroe est pas nouvelle, souvenez-vous.
Voilà donc une nouvelle série de la belle (oui parce que moi, Lindsay, je la trouve magnifique hein), nue pour le prochain Playboy, toujours sur la même thématique, qui finalement lui réussi assez :).
Enfin, disons que ce shooting publié sur Juliland de la jolie Lexi Belle est un peu coquin sur la fin.. Mais au delà de son aspect coquinou, moi perso il me fait un peu peur…
| Madeline had an idea. Not necessarily the most original either, but at least it held until the end, and has shaped it with class. What idea? Well to shoot every day for a year (in 2011 then) and get a fairly short film, all his life in 2011. I really like the idea:). It's fresh, honest, and she is smiling more (and pretty), then you can go! |
Nice yes at the same time, I feel I've done underground, work, sleep last year, then shoot 2 / 3 tricks out of the ordinary that it can be challenging!
At the same time not everyone has the opportunity to live in California to have a big budget outings and lots of nice friends ...
Nice!
And I liked the music!
@ AdminOfPlaygroup
> LCD Soundsystem (Sound Of Silver) and it's good!
Born and raised in Houston, Texas, Anderson was interested in filmmaking and performance from a young age, shooting crude Super-8 movies and staging elaborate school plays. As a philosophy student at the University of Texas at Austin, Anderson found a kindred spirit in classmate Owen Wilson, who shared the director’s passion for playwriting and watching classic films of the ‘70s. The two became roommates and lingered at UT; as Anderson honed his skills at a local public access television station and Wilson performed in local stage productions. The duo then set out to shoot a full-length script they wrote, titled Bottle Rocket, recruiting two of Wilson’s brothers, Luke Wilson and Andrew Wilson, to perform. Despite Andrew’s production connections in Austin, however, the team eventually ran out of film stock and funds, and they had to edit their footage into a 13-minute short. The black-and-white production eventually found its way to fellow Texan filmmaker L.M. Kit Carson, a family friend of the Wilsons who was so impressed with the work that he sent a copy to his colleague Platt and convinced Anderson to enter the film in the Sundance Film Festival. Before long, the film had also garnered the attention of Platt’s partner, Brooks, and he orchestrated a deal for Anderson to shoot the full-length feature with Columbia Pictures.
Billed as a botched-heist comedy, Bottle Rocket also made room for its characters’ romantic neuroses and aimless slacker ennui. Though critics responded to such a mix, likening the coming-of-age tale to everything from Easy Rider to Saturday Night Fever, Columbia barely promoted the picture’s early-1996 release, and it was quickly swept out of theaters. Luckily, positive word-of-mouth gave it a healthy life on video, and Anderson remained a noteworthy young talent, winning the Best New Filmmaker award at the MTV Movie Awards later that year. The director began to shop his second script around town with little success, until Disney chairman and Rocket fan Joe Roth signed on to Anderson’s project, vowing to give him low-budget, hands-off support. The resulting film, Rushmore, was completed in 1998. Instead of test-marketing the film with focus groups (as had been done with Rocket), Roth and Anderson opted instead to take the feature to festivals. Critics gave the film an overwhelmingly enthusiastic reception: by the time it opened in wide release in February, 1999, Premiere magazine had called Rushmore the best film of the year, and co-star Bill Murray had already been named Best Supporting Actor by both the New York and Los Angeles Film Critics Associations, as well as the National Film Critics Society. A bittersweet coming-of-age tale about an underachieving but ambitious-to-a-fault teen, played with gusto by the unknown Jason Schwartzman, the film scored points for its wry, deadpan sense of humor and inventive visuals. Anderson drew from sources as disparate as Murmur of the Heart, Charles Schultz’s Peanuts cartoons, and Meatballs, giving the proceedings a giddy absurdity without ever losing genuine compassion for his characters. Despite the orgy of positive reviews and Touchstone studios’ aggressive marketing campaign, however, the director’s second feature failed to resonate with audiences who may have been expecting a laugh-a-minute Murray vehicle. Worse yet, when Academy Awards nominations were announced in mid-February, Murray was passed over in favor of actors in more traditionally high-minded roles.
Still, Anderson’s ardent fans, including director Martin Scorsese, who listed Rocket as one of his 10 favorite movies of the 1990s — eagerly awaited his 2001 effort. Titled The Royal Tenenbaums, the J.D. Salinger-inspired tale revolved around a loose-knit, oddly-dressed, super-intellectual Manhattan family, and reunited some of the cast of Rushmore with a new phalanx of stars including Danny Glover, Anjelica Huston, and Gene Hackman. Given a careful platform release by Touchstone, the film garnered enough critical praise and positive word-of-mouth to rally over $50 million dollars in box office receipts, more than three times that of Rushmore, proving perhaps that the public had finally come around to Anderson’s uniquely skewed worldview. At the very least, the members of the Academy had: In February, 2002, Anderson and Wilson garnered a Best Original Screenplay nomination for their multi-character tragicomedy.
Anderson’s worldview didn’t serve him quite as well on his next feature, 2004’s curiously titled seafaring opus The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou. Pairing again with Bill Murray on the heels of the actor’s acclaimed turn in Lost in Translation, Anderson crafted a paean to another arrested adolescent, this time a sort of slacker Jacques Cousteau. Co-writing the screenplay with Kicking and Screaming auteur Noah Baumbach; Anderson crafted an absurdist adventure as whimsical as it was sprawling. Bolstered by an omnipresent promotional campaign, The Life Aquatic attracted hordes of Anderson-philes to the theaters, at least in its first couple of weeks. Unfortunately, the film was greeted with what must’ve been a first for the young filmmaker: critical indifference. Despite its candy-colored visual scheme, The Life Aquatic didn’t attract half the audience of Tenenbaums, and was ignored in year-end awards races. Regrouping for a project that was at once more ambitious and less far-flung, Anderson collaborated with Rushmore star Schwartzman and friend Roman Coppola on the script for 2007’s India-set The Darjeeling Limited. Exploring a similar dynamic to Bottle Rocket, the film set three fractious brothers, Schwartzman, Wilson and Adrien Brody, on a life-changing journey through the subcontinent. Toning down the whimsy and amping up the drama, the Fox Searchlight release found mixed reviews and a mostly appreciative, if small, audience.
(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=2:263477~T1)