What do Emperor Hirohito, Princess Benedikte of Denmark, and Duke Ellington have in common?
- Log in to post comments
More like this
There are two kinds of worries - those you can do something about and those you can't. Don't spend any time on the latter.
- Duke Ellington
Prompted by Paul Bloom's piece in Slate, Does Religion Make You Nice? Does atheism make you mean?, I went out and read Society without God: What the Least Religious Nations Can Tell Us About Contentment , the book which which Bloom references. It's a very slim volume, and though the author is a…
Late last year I reviewed a book by an American sociologist on Danish secularism. The book was titled Society without God: What the Least Religious Nations Can Tell Us About Contentment, and apparently its publication resulted in some controversy in Denmark, in large part due to perceived…
I'm finishing writing a book and you guys will have the opportunity to review the manuscript some time towards late summer. The working title is Mead-halls of the Eastern Geats. Elite Settlements and Political Geography AD 375-1000 in Ãstergötland, Sweden.
The title alludes to the Old English epic…
Along with William Randolph Hearst, Lonnie Donnegan, and Rod McKuen?
They were all born on April 29; in 1901, 1944, and 1899, respectively. (See for a celebration of the first). It's also Henri Poincar�'s birthday (1854).
Princess Benedikte, Duke Ellington and that evil piece of shit, Hirohito, were all born on this day. The world can be thankful for the first two, and regret that the third didn't die in infancy.
1) They all have royal titles.
2) Happy birthday, guys!
Happy birthday to all four of you. ;)
The same thing that you have in common with my (now) five-year-old!
Happy day. :)
Happy Birthday!
Happy Birthday!...
The all had better sense than to earn a PhD.
Happy Birthday.
Happy Birthday!