Colorado Nothing without Providence
 
Top  ◊  State Your Place  ◊  Message Boards  ◊  About  ◊  FAQ  ◊  Contact us!  ◊  RSS 2.0  

Spring: Spring Roll Machine

NEW YORK - "Hey slim," a man called out to Rhonda Walker at a party last week, "you looking really good tonight."
The “Art of Richard Tuttle” is on display at the Dallas Art Museum’s Barrel Vault, Hanley, Lamont, Rachofsky and Stoffel Galleries. Tuttle uses various materials to create works which defy categorization. The presentation includes 300 works.
Let's try this: Since pitching in baseball seems to be the end-all predictor as to who will win the World Series, and of who will get there in the first place, why not use goaltending in hockey to predict the NHL season?
Brothers and sisters of indie! Break out the web browsers, as it's time once again for the PLUG Independent Music Awards , honoring the best and brightest in, you guessed it, independent music-- as chosen by you, the fans.
Hordes of parents and children wandered through the pumpkin patch at Applecrest in Hampton Falls looking for a gourd for the perfect jack-o'-lantern last Saturday afternoon.
CARLISLE — They know waging war well here. They teach it.
Now the idea seems daft. But in the spring of 1972, the dumping of a million or so tires offshore here looked like ecological enlightenment. From the scrap tires, artificial reefs would grow and fish would throng, or so it was thought. A flotilla of more than 100 private boats with volunteers turned out to help. A Goodyear blimp christened the site by dropping a gold-painted tire.
Mïlés Bårgèr reports: According to Sigur Rós' official website, the Icelandic ambient pop band have recently wandered back into their mythical studio to record a follow-up of the full-length nature to their wonderfully ambiguous 2002 release, ( ) . The album is expected to be released in spring 2005, to be followed by a tour of Europe, North America, and perhaps some other Sigur Rós-friendly
FULDA FREE PRESS/Norma Dittman Soybean harvesting began slowly last week as farmers found the beans were a "little too wet". Dust rolls across the fields as many different makes and models of combines work to harvest a bean crop that was planted in early spring.
New treatments feed a compulsion to buff, tighten and pamper every bit of skin.

Add your Comment
Latest Messages (1)
itok (huh)
Tuesday, Mar 14th 2006