Dark Chocolate
Clever campaign by M&Ms Mars to announce their new dark chocolate M&Ms. Wa-ay more fun than homework! Post to let me know how many you found...and what homework suffered because of it.
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Heather Newton, the head of stone conservation, said that 20 per cent of the hundreds of 12th century Purbeck marble pillars that line the interior walls of the cathedral were bound with tape to prevent them crumbling. She added that a number of crockets, the decorative ends of the pinnacles on some of the towers, had been blown off in storms.
The dean, the Very Rev Robert Willis, said that all avenues of fundraising would be considered, though suggestions that the cathedral could sell the Archbishop of Canterbury's house or collaborate with wealthy Muslims might not best serve the local community.
Should teenagers and others in the Church express themselves to the world through blogs? Because of the obvious dangers; the clear biblical principles that apply; the fact that it gives one a voice; that it is almost always idle words; that teens often do not think before they do; that it is acting out of boredom; and it is filled with appearances of evil -- blogging is simply not to be done in the Church. It should be clear that it is unnecessary and in fact dangerous on many levels.
Let me emphasize that no one -- including adults -- should have a blog or personal website (unless it is for legitimate business purposes).
A creationist theme park in Pensacola where children learn that dinosaurs and humans coexisted after God created the world in six days, faces extinction because its founder refuses to pay income taxes or apply for building permits.
Kent Hovind, also known as Dr. Dino, argues that his employees are missionaries and that his park is a church. Hovind has been indicted on 58 federal charges, which include withholding nearly $470,000 in employee taxes.
Dinosaur Adventure Land tried to qualify for the property-tax exemption but does not meet the law's standards because it is not a 501c3 nonprofit organization, said Glen Stoll, director of ministries and property for Creation Science Evangelism, a ministry that oversees the park.
The announcement came over loudspeakers last month as fat clouds formed above a replica of Christ's garden tomb. Dozens of disappointed tourists and pilgrims who came to witness the spectacle - a daily event at the Holy Land Experience, a 15-acre, $16 million biblical theme park tucked off Interstate 4 in Orlando - trudged toward the exit.
Park officials were apologetic but firm: None of their employees would hang on the cross during a lightning storm.
Obstacles are standard mini-golf course tunnels, twists, and chutes. Scenes are comprised of repurposed lawn ornaments and cement statuettes -- no priest-folk artist spent his life carving here. Jonah sits in the Whale's mouth, comfortable in shorts; a statue of St. Francis monitors porcelain animal pairs boarding the Ark. Old Testament stories make for better hazards, so the first nine holes are easy to identify without reading the signs.