Monday, January 31, 2011

Expiration Date On Unopened Mayonnaise

Polar News and No. 2 The Little Polar

We were talking about there is little time Toxins Dear Jean Paul Jody, a novel that is not unrelated to the case Picks of the ... Tunisia since the Revolution began, the Arab world's hot! It is high time to dive into the novel Prayer Moor Adlène Meddi of which we reproduce here the interview given year for the site last Duclock . Note in passing qu'Adlène Meddi is also interviewed in the number 6 on the Index.




knows why I have a weakness for Algiers. I've never been there other than film or book, but this city attracts me. So when the publisher Jigal sent us Prayer Moor I dove in and grabbed me the book. It will not be without this issue again in the next issue of the index, but you can already get it urgently: it's black and banging with just enough poetry inside.





Adlène Meddi and 3 Dj Duclock questions (plus sub)

Dj Duclock: If I understand you live in Algiers can you we talk a bit about what listen right now in the city, what are the songs that can be heard while walking in the streets and stairways of the city?

Adlène Meddi: The soundtrack of Algiers? early morning seagulls, then the sirens of ambulances and cops and Chaabi (popular music of Algiers Andalusian inspiration we quote Guerrouabi, El Anka, Zahi Kamal Messoudi), tube radio in Algiers El Bahdja taxis and hairdressers (Algiers "modern", with soaring flamenco kitsch or solgans football!) Of the Julio-aznavor in old cafes of downtown if the jingle news channels like Al Jazeera!

Dj Duclock: What are you reading now?

Adlène Meddi: I ended SUBLIME Citizens of illegal DOA! (More than 100 pages)

Dj Duclock: What are you listening to right now? The spinning disc on the turntable?

Adlène Meddi: Charlie Parker at the Philharmonic, 1949 (attention! Guest star Ella Fitzgerald and Lester Young!

Dj Duclock: What surprised you lately? When were you surprised the last time?

Adlène Meddi: A masterpiece (I measure my words): The Missing , novel of New York Daniel Mendelsohn. A great moment in literature !


Here's a video of Ammar Bouras a text (I seem to recognize phrases from the Moor Prayer ) Of Adlène Meddi .





Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Mysore Mallige Suicide What Is Mysore Mallige ?

the Dj Duclock No. 42



I hope you did not dislocated knee with the Black Bottom of Troggs at K-Libre because nerds dance is not over. Voivi a piece of Clive Hunt and Icho Candy. Guns & Guns calls to disarm. The song has surely to do with the fact that Clive Hunt has received eight bullets from a revolver in 2004 leaving a restaurant on Church Road in St Catherine. One of his friends, Gregory Edwards aka Bobby Reds, who came to help was shot in the shootout. You can listen

Guns & Guns on Deezer is the seventh song.

Maytag Performa Pdb2600awe Sprayarm

Where to find the index?


Saint-Malo (pictured above), Grenoble and Nice ... thank you to these new libraries that receive the index!

Index is available at the following locations:

NANTES
Book Etoile Polar West Wind, the Atalante, Durance, Coiffard and Fnac
PARIS
Bookstore Terminus Polar , 1 rue Abel Rabaud
ST MAUR OF SEPTIC
Librairie La Griffe Black , 2 rue de la Varenne
CAMBRAI
Librairie Furet du Nord , 22 St. Martin Mail
ANGERS
Bookstore Contact , 3 rue Lenepveu
LIMOGES
Bookstore and Plume , 2-4 Place de la Motte
NIORT
Bookstore Halles, 1 bis rue Thiers
LYON
Bookstore Au bonheur des ogres , 9 High Street Vaise
SAINT MALO
Odyssey Bookshop , 4 rue du Puits to Britches
GRENOBLE
Arthaud Librairie Privat, 16 rue Jean-Jacques Rousseau
NICE
Bookstore Surveys and Oddities , 5 rue Barberis

Receive The Indic mail:

Send a check for 5 euros (from No. 5 to 4 euros for the previous) in order Fade To Black at the following address: Fade To Black - 27 rue Anatole Le Braz - 44000 NANTES

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Can You Use A Health Card As Id

A subscription ... gift (4)! The Mystery of the Small


Update February 4, 2011: ALL BOOKS HAVE BEEN OFFERED

2011 and Go for The Indic No. 8 is on track. After a number of robberies (Clue # 7) here that the writing team looked at the prison, that seems more and more present in our society. The confinement will be discussed critically through the police literature, film, the first season of Oz and an interview with Rene FREGNI. Science-fiction will be no exception!

In this issue forever, you will find an interview with DOA and Manotte to wait until the release of their romance, and an article on the relationship between cinema and literature, through reading the works of Franck Thilliez. You'll also find your regular features of chronic, music, plus a new novel (a text translated by Richard Stratton Thierry Marignac), poetry and crossword puzzles!

Through participation editions La Tengo, we are pleased to offer subscribers the next 5 Jérémie Guez novel Paris by night, and we appreciated that you included in the index. Hurry, limited quantity ! (Quality, it is assured.)


Subscription: 15 euros for 3 issues, by check payable to Fade To Black - 27 rue Anatole Le Braz - 44000 NANTES.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Salton Waffle Maker Instructions

In 2010, electricity consumption has broken all records

Ooon is the champioooons, it is the champiooons, we are, we are, we are the champions!



In 2010, electricity consumption has broken all records


Electricity consumption peaked in 2010, exceeding 500 TWh. The annual report published by RTE Power also notes an increase in peak consumption and growth in production from renewable sources.

5:38:02 p.m. 20 / 01/2011 -
Read the news

© Environment News

Thursday, January 20, 2011

How To Lower My Hct Level?

Dj Duclock No. 40




We leave prison Ice T (see the Little Polar No. 39 in K-free ) and into that of Sammy Lee as we await the dancers the MGM. The prison is a place of outstanding thriller, The Indic No. 8 which will be available beginning in February has made his central theme.


Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Televid Apo 77 F Stop

rosy Beatrice Egemar


Abstract:
Paris, 1572

Monday 18 August, before the Notre-Dame de Paris, Henri de Navarre is preparing to take to wife the Princess Marguerite de Valois, sister of the King of France. In the crowd, there is consternation: the king will he really give her sister a Huguenot, a heretic?
Serving Catherine de Medici, the reinemère, Louise Laval observes the bride, but she has other things in mind. A young bridesmaid as she died in mysterious circumstances. Louise is convinced that this is a murder, a crime that is linked to a sinister plot, hatched in the same corridors of the Louvre. Helped by his young servant Perdicault, Louise will try to unmask the killer. But the Court, the climate is detestable, and she is drawn into a vortex of intrigue. Really wants Catherine de Medici? Rene, the perfumer to the Queen, is he a poisoner? Who wants to get rid of the Admiral de Coligny, a Huguenot leaders? So many questions that Louise will try to answer, but as they approached the end, it will be overtaken by history. One night, the bells of Paris ring at random. We are at the dawn of August 24, and Paris is preparing to celebrate Saint Barthelemy ...

The Author: Beatrice

Egemar is author of Youth and is particularly interested in historical fiction. After exploring ancient Egypt with The Eye
Seth , she ventured today in Renaissance France.

The Illustrator:

Aurélien Police is a versatile illustrator who practices both in achieving record covers as the covers of novels, illustration of newspaper articles and role plays that make short films. Mainly digital, his work combines photography, scans of paintings or drawings, and gives it its unique style.


ON SALE January 6, 2011


Collection: "Black Current"

Price: 13,50 EUR
ISBN: 978-2-35488-088-0
Released: Volumen

Monday, January 17, 2011

Hair Styles On My Head

Polar and news


crime fiction is often described as a "mirror of society" has become hackneyed phrase as meaningless a suspense.

Sometimes however, authors really captured the society in which they live and right now it is not a day without thinking of a book: Toxins Dear Jean-Paul Jody. He was already well up to date when the media were predicting our imminent death due to influenza A. Back on stage in front of the stage. The other day the lawyer Servier shouted in fury against his client and placed the responsibility on an administrative error. We feel that everyone is passing the buck, and that this affair will end Picks juice pudding. The State will compensate instead of the laboratory, and will continue to say that the poor individual is the cause of the collapse of Social Security.

So therefore to understand with clarity - even if it seems obscure - the struggles of power and interest in the pharmaceutical world, you ruez on Dear Toxins. We regret that the publisher ultimately does more work and do not flood the media press releases to report the existence of this novel.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Gold And Black Bandanas

If Kafka had been a DJ .... Larry Kramer wrote


exactly one month ago, I published here a text from a friend, Yves, who criticized the music going on in the evenings bears. Much discussion followed on FB and elsewhere, and DJ Yohm , who is a friend also asked me to write an answer to explain his point of view. It took me time to do it, I'm late and I apologize. So it goes like this ...

If Kafka had been a DJ ...
... I bet it would be queer, Poz and wants to play music "sharp" at parties to Bear (Bears if you prefer).
"Weg von hier ', das ist mein Ziel," you know?
It describes a Kafkaesque situation which could be the feeling that a number of DJ's today, after much criticism.
And to ask the question:

In fact, what is a DJ?

is an old debate that we address, we DJ's of all stripes, known or unknown, since we started growing a few disks near a mock dance floor.
The DJ is a bastard. Neither musician (originally the creation of its status), or simple jukebox (or at least trying to pretend that it is more than that).
Initially, he was entitled to little consideration. He has not been considered as an artist after the assimilation of the phenomenon of raves and house music. It took France a Laurent Garnier to realize what a DJ could offer its audience. And also discover that in turn could be a musician.
Yet the world of the remix is his domain, and that since the disco, well before the 90s.
Today we are in 2011 and the role of DJ is finally recognized. And much more valued. We know he is capable of producing in turn, to astonish, to detonate, mix the immiscible, to dare, to let go, to the delight or ears, or legs and sometimes both.

But yet here was some voices again. The DJ should it primarily "serve" audiences?
Should he do what is expected of him? Should please any price? Should he sell his soul to hell "commercial" as there is a hell of political correctness ....

There are many facets in what some consider a trade, and others as a passion.
Perhaps the big difference between these two approaches is confusing: there are DJ's who practice to (try to) live in, and "amateur" in the true sense of the term, who indulge in a passion and would still share that passion itself.
Wanting to live because of passing records raises several points: there's money involved compensation of such a DJ is more or less directly to the attendance of the place where it operates, and thus the satisfaction of public. It is de facto given to a notion of "making use" professional vision that are encountered in a multitude of other trades.
Pleasing musically, it's a service. It heard the public what it wants to hear at any given time. In this, these DJs Should be considered, almost, as employees of service.
This does look like there not in this profession to be appointed a time, nice name, maybe a little outdated, the record store? Profession that requires great listening skills and anticipating the desires of the public.

For other DJ's is the passion that drives them all, well before the need for paychecks, and a very personal passion for music and we want to show to others. The sense of action that then leads the DJ is rather vague, protean and elusive. It gets tricky
speaking of work, rather a book, or work within the meaning of the word. A DJ does not pieces at random. He selects them. It therefore makes a choice. This choice is personal.
What are the motivations of these choices? His only pleasure? The pleasure he knows he will get to the other? His musical curiosity? His own tastes that he will put forward through the music he loves in others?

Is this a failed artist who goes into the music of others that he is able to compose alas by itself? Is this a nester's because the music production now is a so important that eventually the "breeders" of music are as important as those that create? Is this an assembler of Engineering, who developed the art of putting together, and this has pushed more or less far a technique now known, and enlisted in electronic and computer systems increasingly sophisticated?
Yes, the DJ is in all cases craftsman.

But what is a craftsman? Let me quote this
:
"Besides the implementation of processes that are the subject of learning, a successful work of the artisan requires something else, (...) something that is not learned and that desperation we call "knack »..."
Jankélévitch, The I-don't-know-what and the almost-nothing, 1957, p. 42.

And do we not become an artist, pushing further the ownership of the songs he chose, so to come in near original composition, so the mix is pushed and the original selection of Songs unparalleled compared to any other DJ.

That portrait of the many facets of this character.

But borders are not as rigid. Because the question of success (thus commercial) also arises for the artist. There are artists
cursed, and others who are filthy rich.

But the public expects of a DJ?
I think there are as many different answers from different people that put their foot at one time or another on a dancefloor.
Suddenly, all debate is sterile, and quickly turns in circles.
As "you can not please everyone," it is better to ask to see if a DJ is able to find its audience .... and the public to find his DJ.

A DJ, a party, this is not something that is imposed. These are people who look like a movie or a book, their evening, their DJs.
is also an approach similar to that journey that makes us approach art in general. And the choice

there a. Different places in which to produce various DJs.
We love, we do not like. Finally all this is not discussed.
The important thing is to have a choice. And for this there are the artistic directors, heads of different places. It is for them to offer diversity.
diversity is achieved over time.
Each evening has its specificities. Each DJ, if it is perceived as a craftsman, has its musical world. And you are simply offered to meet him. A DJ
programming, and tastes. These are known quickly.
Today more than ever with the Internet, Facebook, blogs, etc. .... DJ publishes playlsits (sometimes) and his mixes, you can listen before you choose. Zapping is easy.

The DJ, like any artist, moved, the public has.
Artistic directors make their programming based on what they believe are the tastes of their audience.
We only hope that the public does not come to parties or concerts by chance, and he keeps active musical attitude.
it is still able to find the energy to move to what he pleases. And develop its own critical sense, rather than listening passively and have the impression that he stuffs the ears, while he always has the zapper hands.

Irritated Ingrown Hair




When I get a message to Kramer, I know he will be taken by anyone here, while his book of 1000 pages and will finally emerge in a few months and it's time attention again to this great man . In short, the celebration of the thirtieth anniversary of AIDS approaching and CNN devoted an issue on the topic by Anderson Cooper. Larry does not appear in the video, too big mouth, but wrote a text on the occasion, which I reproduce here. Very interesting also reserved his introduction to his long list of friends, which explains the context of its contribution, which I do not agree 100% but, hey, this is Larry Kramer, and anything its share is above (.......) fill the box.


Note: Anderson Cooper DID special last night (January 14, 2011) about 30 Years of AIDS. for The Most Part It Was a pretty lackluster affair and bloodless, With The exception of a magnificent appearance by Elton John and a moving one by Mo'nique. The rest of it was pretty much pablum, recycled stuff from eons of too familiar footage, and appearances by people with nothing new or challenging to offer. While the producer spoke to me for hours to pick my brains, he made it plain from the beginning that i was not going to be asked to be on the show because of my outspokenness (and because I threatened jokingly—yeah right—to ask Anderson when he was going to come out and be seen with his boy friend publicly), which, when I heard the cast of who was going to appear, was fine with me. instead, I was invited to write this opinion piece to say what they would not welcome on the show.

What troubled me most about the show was Anderson himself. It was a noble gesture for a reporter, closeted or not, to put on an AIDS special, but did he have to be such a wimp on it himself? Reporters are meant to ask questions, and good questions (Anderson once had a reputation for doing just that; what in the world has happened to him?); the questions Anderson asked were puerile beyond belief. He challenged no one with anything. Ss that what good reporters do? He had America's leading AIDS doctor, Anthony Fauci, on: how could Anderson not challenge him with some of the points that I made below (in a piece Anderson's folks asked me to write for him)? or indeed to raise one single point anywhere else on the show that I write about below.

The most honest part of the program came at the very end when he asked Elton (whom Anderson kept fawningly deferring to as "Sir Elton;" even Elton gave him a look as if to say, enough of that already, boy), if he was positive about the future. Elton, after a long pause, a very long pause, where you could see this great man deciding whether to say what he really thought, which was "no i am not hopeful about the future," mumble some painful words along the lines of "after thirty years we are still here talking about the same things!" and then he too offering up a platitude of hope, disingenuous in the extreme.

One wonders why Anderson put on the show at all. At least he gave me the chance to write this piece. It appears to have had a goodly number of Facebook recommendations (evidently the be-all and end-all of today's pulse taking) along with some thousand of the nastiest, most hateful comments imaginable. I am told this is usually the case with posted comments: the nutcases are ready and waiting to pounce. Still it is always disheartening to see in black and white the visible manifestations of just the hate i speak of in my article below.

larry




AIDS IS A PLAGUE ALLOWED TO HAPPEN
By Larry Kramer, Special to CNN
January 14, 2011 1:20 p.m. EST

Editor's note. Larry Kramer co-founded Gay Men's Health Crisis and founded ACT UP, an activist organization that has campaigned for treatments for HIV/AIDS. His play, "The Normal Heart," about the early years of AIDS and directed by Joel Grey, will be produced on Broadway by Daryl Roth and will star Joe Mantello; it will also be filmed next summer starring Mark Ruffalo and directed by Ryan Murphy. "The American People," his novel about the history of homosexuals in America, will be published by Farrar Straus and Giroux. Kramer, whose partner is David Webster, is HIV+ and the recipient of a liver transplant.


New York City (CNN) -- I want this article to break your heart. But it deals with a subject that has had a tough time of it in the break-everyone's-heart department. I'll bet that a number of you will be more angry at me than sympathetic by the time you finish reading it. If indeed you finish reading it.

From its very beginning, most people have not wanted to know the truths about AIDS. This is an indisputable fact that continues until this very minute. I have been on the front lines since Day 1, so I know what I'm talking about.

Here are 10 realities about AIDS, and I've learned them the hard way:

1. AIDS is a plague -- numerically, statistically and by any definition known to modern public health -- though no one in authority has the guts to call it one.

2. Too many people hate the people that AIDS most affects, gay people and people of color. I do not mean dislike, or feel uncomfortable with. I mean hate. Downright hate. Down and dirty hate.

3. Likewise, both people who don't have sex the way they do (if they have it at all) and people who take drugs in order to feel better in a world that they find wretched are considered two highly expendable populations by the powerful forces that control this world.

4. AIDS was allowed to happen. It is a plague that need not have happened. It is a plague that could have been contained from the very beginning.

5. It is a plague that is not going to go away. It is only going to get worse.

6. There is no cure and the amount of money expended toward finding one is pathetically small, miniscule, puny, and totally indicative of a system and a government and a country and a world that does not want to end this plague.

7. There is no incentive for pharmaceutical companies to find a cure since they are making billions selling, at highly inflated prices, the many anti-viral drugs that those infected must consume -- drugs that only keep us living but still infected just enough to continue to possibly still infect others.

8. Educational campaigns, indeed all attempts at prevention, have been too stupid, useless, lily-livered, and nicey-nicey to accomplish much of anything.

9. There is no one of any use really in charge of this plague, in America or anywhere else in the world -- and it is a worldwide plague by now -- and this lack of decent, responsible and humane leaders has been so since its beginning in 1981. They lie to us. I consider most of those who have been or are in charge as equal to murderers.

10. One out of every five men who have sex with men in America is now HIV-positive, and more than 50% of gay men do not know it. Doctors in Chelsea say the statistics for that New York neighborhood have jumped from one out of five to one out of four. At the rate things are going, almost all gay men in America could be HIV-positive, which a lot of people would really like to see happen.

These are appalling statistics, appalling statements, appalling facts, and yet no one responds to them when I raise them. Why should they? Too many people want too many other people dead, and it is fearful and as we continue to see over and over, often dangerous to confront them.

Governments and bureaucrats and presidents and politicians and the people who run this world lie to people. They tell us HIV is under control. They tell us case numbers are decreasing. They tell us that all is being done that can be done. They tell us HIV is too complicated to eradicate. They tell us gay people and people of color have made more progress than ever before. These are all lies.

We must not believe them. How could we when, in one place or another:
-- They also tell us we can't get legally married.
-- They also tell us that we cannot legally adopt children.
-- They also tell us religions will not recognize us.
-- They also tell us we can't serve our country yet.
-- They also tell us our real history cannot be taught in schools.
-- They also tell us that gay students cannot organize in schools.
-- They also tell us that people who murder us are not committing hate crimes.
-- They also tell us we cannot insure our partners.
-- They also tell us our partners are not legal.
-- They also tell us we cannot have equal opportunities.
-- They also tell us we can't kiss each other or hold each other's hands in public.
-- They also tell us that our Supreme Court doesn't want to know about any of this, doesn't want to make us free and equal, doesn't want to honor the Bill of Rights.

If you want to know why AIDS is a plague, I have just told you why.

I could add a thousand more "they also's." I could expound and expand and add so many facts and figures to the above they'd put you to sleep. I helped start the two major AIDS organizations in America. I have watched almost everyone I once knew die.
For some 30-plus years, I have been trying to tell the world where this plague came from and why, and I will continue to do so until I die, too.

You see, I simply can't get the memories and the ghosts of just about every friend I had out of my life. And since there is no doubt in my mind that this plague of HIV/AIDS that took them from me was and continues to be allowed to happen, I am duty bound to tell this hideous history as best and as fully as I can. It's the least I can do.

That is correct: This plague of HIV/AIDS was intentionally allowed to happen. It still is. Nothing has changed in the intentionality department. Hate has a way of hanging around forever and too often winning out in the end.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Do Reptiles Or Mammals Do More Cell Respiration

Archives envy


What's exciting when you publish its archives on the net is to look in detail the traffic it causes. There are documents that are appealing and are a pleasure to everybody because they find it . There are old black and white 80s, everyone loves it, too, is innoffensif and it is not binding. The articles 10 years old, already it starts to get complicated, it is not enough to be vintage dated and too controversial to be accessible to all. The Chronic resembling that said the detective in "True Blood :" Before they made fun of me because I was telling the truth, now they laugh at me because I was right, it's shit.

And then there are the recent publications Magazine. When I first put the December 31 last, there was an interest, yes, but less pronounced than I expected. I did not fly after all people do what they want and then the days following Christmas Eve, everyone is in a bad mood and not very awake anyway. That's when the interview of Butt on Magazine was published that the peak of visits was impressive. Suddenly, my site exceeded all previous records, I had never seen so many people, it feels like the first day of sales in a department store. The number of visitors after Butt surprised me. Obviously, foreigners who visit the site Butt are much more curious than the French, though most directly affected since most of the text is in French. Must say that it starts to get funny: little media interest in the French gay Maga and exhibition of the archives while Butt talks about it, it starts to be ridiculous for them m'enfin

... Everyone knows that to motivate an interest in sustainable any site, it should be fed daily. Which is totally fictitious and burdensome anyway. It is not the post office and I do not want to become slave to my own website after 40 years to be Slave to the Rhythm. My initial analysis is that the French are less interested in the idea that the U.S. Archives (The site of Butt in New York, not in Amsterdam). This is not because the U.S. has a population five times greater than ours, they are genuinely curious about the archives they do not fully understand but which are part of gay culture in general. The French are interested in archives Magazine, but it easy, and it is their right. For example, they are very rare to forwarder on their site archives Maga, to talk on FB, Twitter and Tumblr, while Americans are more likely to encourage Reblog a comment.

We will still say that I favor American culture, I always look at what is positive and the negative in their home. After all, Americans have not mobilized when many LGBT bookstores have closed one after another. And the disappearance of the famous libraries and symbolic, like A Different Light in New York and San Francisco, Giovanni's Room in Philadelphia, accentuate this phenomenon while the words in the mouth of Paris still exists. An interesting comment on a U.S. website deplored the closure of gay bookstores and loss of ambience found there. There was a feeling in these important areas and warm. Alison Bechdel has done a lot of comics from the world of libraries lesbians. For my part, whenever I went to New York or London, I could not conceive of not going for a ride straight to Oscar Wilde Memorial Bookshop or Gay's The Word .

All this long introduction (if you're still reading this, is that you really are a curious person) to arrive at the description of one of the places I love most in the world. I have often expressed my love for Housing Works, but I have never written a text that explains why I so love this bookstore Crosby Street in New York. Housing Works is a association that was created at the height of AIDS. The idea was simple. AIDS patients died and left behind them collect full of books and records. Instead of throwing it all out on the street in the rush to a funeral often problematic, Housing Works proposed to recover these collections and resold. And with the benefit of the sale, the association helped the sick by offering therapeutic apartments for those who became homeless before dying.

Not only the concept is totally unique and generous, but especially: he walked. With an ethical and disciplined organization, books and records in the database came directly from missing persons and we felt in the past these objects of the deceased. Some books are annotated, some even had autographs of authors, some with dedications man gay gay man, and then many of these books had a rare perfume culture of the time. Today, the bulk of books sold by Housing Works does really comes more people died from AIDS, but there are always lots that arrive every day, for a full case, death, a move, divorce, a drama of some sort.

This is not the drama that interests me here. Housing Works is far from a gloomy place. It is a large loft, open to the street with a circular walkway on the first floor, like a normal library, with shelves and shelves of books by theme. And what is wonderful in this American spirit of the passion of the book is that there is a small bar that sells fruit juices, cakes and everything is delicious and simple in the context of a search book. Another significant interest in a city where it is so difficult to find a place to pee or poop, there are free toilets always clean (with beautiful sinks, fact fans). So when you walk in Manhattan, it is always wise to include a visit by Housing Works for a drink, warm (in winter) and go to pee room.

The atmosphere of this place is magical. You can sit for hours without the slightest look of inquiry from an employee. The mood is studious but cool, people talk in whispers. Everything is wooden. There is a section LGBT quite stunning, with ancient and modern books. There are historical and scientific sections, all subjects in fact, a sort of mini-Strand where the price of books is frightening: a dollar for a classic, a few dollars to a collector. The only dilemma is to ask how we will bring all those books in France, where heavy baggage at the airport.

The years pass, everything changes, but as soon as I arrive in New York, Housing Works is still one of the first things I do immediately after my arrival. It's a lucky charm a way to start the holiday off right, like going to see what the store sells Supreme , right side. It is a ritual of welcome that also gives me an idea of the current American literary as in the batch of books, many are recent. In the blink of an eye, it turns the page of the country's political discourse. Because of its history, Housing Works is a boutique frienfly gay but not gay per se. It is a place minority, mixed, women, blacks, Latin, anything. I remember one day I had to be very sentimental when I went to checkout, I made a sort of statement like "I come here every trip to New York for 15 years and I wanted you say that I love this place "and the seller had gay watched with a detached look, as if I open overshare, and I had felt stupid, but I did not regret having said what I had on my heart. As Marvin Gaye when he made a double album his ex-wife, "Here My Dear."

short, everything to speak text archives. Internet bookstores close one after the other is normal. It is irreversible, but there is a feeling in these places unique. After all, in 10 years, I'm sure there will be books that will make the apology the first Starbucks in Paris, such as next to Cox in Paris. "You remember the Starbucks next to Cox?" Say the young crazy today, who spend hours chatting, talking on their phones or whatever the fuck do THEY feel like doing. So I'm just arouse in you the desire to go to Housing Works for the next time you're in New York. Remember that these places will disappear, like the wonderful Pop Shop Keith Haring which was 50 meters of Housing Works. should breathe the atmosphere of these places before they are dispersed by wind modern day.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Tech Deck Live Trouble

The Mystery of Little Dj Duclock No. 38




we have witnessed the arrest of Gainsbar on K-Libre , the guy is doing pretty well. But when Fred "Toots" Hibbert was arrested in possession of marijuana and sentenced to prison. He writes 54-46 Was My Number . Toots now no longer in prison but the song ends with these words 54-46 Was My Number / Right now, Someone else has That Number (54-46 was my number / At this point someone else has this issue ) ...



Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Prices List Amc Cookware

Action cons thermal regulation

Source: Journal of Environment

vendors toaster worry!

" The malcontents are the Groupement inter-device manufacturers of household equipment (Gifam) and the Union of Industries and thermal air movers (Uniclima)."

Read the brief

Wait, soon you will have commercials on the radio ...

Household Lubes To Wank With

Uploaded Series "Revenue" Marion Vandenbroucke on-site kitchen seemania cp.net




Forum seemania-cp-kitchen is open since August 2010, for collectors of postcards of recipes, both old, semi- modern or modern, so they can find other collectors, talk, to trade, find new publishers.
Since its opening, has added other collectors, like bookmarks, beans, old maps, various cards, themes.
This forum is based on the exchange in a friendly spirit, it is completely free and open to all.
Currently the forum is composed of 28 members who have access to all subjects, and we hope it will grow, reach not only France but worldwide, because the postcards recipes exist in all countries .....

For more information: http://seemania-cuisine-cp.1fr1.net/


Monday, January 10, 2011

Why Does Water Move In The Respirometer Pipettes

New collection cartery 2011: Anne-Sophie urban Milo










Thursday, January 6, 2011

Created Belt Wrestling

The thriller from above

Photo: Kevork Djansezian -AP-Sipa

Last night we went to Lieu Unique in Nantes, which housed within a "cycle noir" Pop's University, François Angelier and Jean-Yves Bochet the issue Bad Genres France Culture. In Nantes, it is sometimes better to be Parisian Nantes to be invited into the high places of culture.

Course Title: James Ellroy : mythical figure of noir Epic - The violence is it related to the geography of cities?

You should know that the University was able to pop around to many people. Indeed, the Lieu Unique subscribers may attend for free at these courses, which would otherwise cost you 3 euros. Thus, a sociological examination of the public lets see a dominant female, who leans toward the fifties and social class undoubtedly higher. The program, it is often rich and supported by interesting speakers (remember a fascinating discussion with Tanguy Viel).

Yesterday evening from the introduction of doubt settled. We not note the sentences verbatim as it will be satisfied with the general idea. Know then that the detective is often poor, simple application of a recipe destined for "fans of thrillers" vaguely presented as arrears. Either. Perhaps to reassure his audience on its quality drive Angelier quote Genet and Artaud, Céline. Real literature, whatever. We are the first to say that there are sacred bad novels in the thriller, but say, there-there more than this noble white literature?

After we have held mythology James Ellroy (alcohol, the death of his mother, not really racist provocateur) they also often referred to as "character", our two sidekicks - a real show as a duo - the writings discussed the vision of an America by the thugs rather than its stars (Kennedy, Luther King Hoover ...) and the style Ellroy, of course. Terms like "explosions", "monster", "original sin" ... are frequently returned with after all this a conclusion among others: Ellroy is a great author, "full stop". Not an author of crime fiction, not because it's so good that it exceeds the thriller. Yes, yes. A good thriller, it's more a thriller (pronounced with a sweeping gesture of the hand), it is literature (Of course you will add the capital L). Moreover, it seems qu'Ellroy himself now says, the thriller is over, past.

Still, the few minutes devoted to the topic (violence and urban geography) would have deserved a real development. How this Ellroy Los Angeles in his novels, how his life revolves around Los Angeles, where her mother was killed, how the city rewards speed and trunk and how it is easy to get rid a corpse ... Reading an excerpt from Red Harvest by Dashiell Hammett nevertheless allowed to enter parallel with the undeniable writing Ellroy. We have learned one thing. That hardly compensates for the fact of being told for the nth time a genre novel, (thriller, SF) sha these great reviews, "beyond" gender "is" that the kind. The same people who sometimes have to tell you that bridling "the detective story has acquired its letters of nobility."

All in all there were about 15 minutes more interesting 1 hour 30 minutes of "conference" where the biographical impulse James Ellroy (who wrote the author to not die / go mad / become a killer as if he did not also have been like, hard rock singer ?) Were repeated several times like a bad broken record complacent. It's a bit sad ... We would have liked to hear about the link between De Lillo Libra and Underworld USA Ellroy, for example. Real surprises. But perhaps the program was not intended to "fans of thrillers" ...

Next session Wednesday, January 12 at 18.30, still with François Angelier and Jean-Yves Bochet that evoke Ledesma, David Peace and Ken Bruen. For us, it will be towards the Melting Potes to stream pictures seen by literary and Pouy Mizio (26 bd de la Prairie au Duc at 19h).

Can I Watch Dvds On My Bmw Nav

The Mystery of Little Dj Duclock


On K-Libre we were on the side of Pigalle - the group, not the Parisian neighborhood - and we took a bucket in a purlin terrible. I suggest you stay in those years ... Oh what was it? There are about fifteen years? Here is a little punk thriller ...

Parabellum, Cayenne


Monday, January 3, 2011

Beats For Gay Men In Liverpool Sydney

News No. 36 Fade To Black The Little

Launch 1 Resto literary
Montesquieu Restaurant in Nantes (44), Thursday, March 17 at 20:30

Conference "image of women in crime fiction" and "crime fiction mirrors society"
Lycée Marcelin Berthelot Questembert ( 56), Thursday, March 24 at 13:15

Meeting on "Travelling thrillers"
Library Rezé Christmas (44), Saturday, April 2 at 15h


Animation thriller 1,2,3
Showcase Oh LA (44), Saturday, April 9 at 15h

Festival in Black Purple

Purple Room Vallon-sur-Loire (44) of 16 to 17 April