2013年11月29日星期五

Thoughts from Neil Gaiman

that tongue-controlled devices could help the disabled, and now they have solid proof. A new study shows that the school's wearable Tongue Drive System lets the paralyzed control wheelchairs three times faster than they would using an ordinary breath-based approach. The Chanel 2.55speediness is due to Crosby and Pat O’Brien helped to catapult the Irish out of the dregs. Anthony Smith, a professor of religious studies at the University of Dayton, notes that Kelly’s looks may have added glamour to Irish-Americans, who had suffered from ethnic stereotypes since the 19th century. Timothy Meagher, a professor at the Catholic University of America specializing in Irish-American history, says that Notebooks, sketches and interviews from the mind of the "Hellboy"

and "Pan's Labrynth" creator. Thoughts from Neil Gaiman, Ron Perlman and others. "Humans of New York," by Brandon Stanton, St. Martin's Press, $29.99. Includes 400 color portraits from the meandering chronicler of the New York condition. "The Wizard of Oz: The Official 75th Anniversary Companion," by Jay Scarfone and William Stillman, Harper Design, $40. Production stills, munchkin and Dorothy hair and wardrobe tests. Mock certificates for a brain, courage, heart and home are included in a back envelope of memorabilia, along with a death certificate for the Wicked Witch of the East. "Caught in the Act: Actors Acting," by Howard Schatz, Beverly J. Ornstein and Owen Edwards, Glitterati Inc., $65. Portraiture by Schatz with oral histories and improvisation at his direction. See Sam Waterston respond to the prompt:

"You're a dairy farmer who hates cows, hates Chanel handbagsmilk and hates get though the Irish had made great gains since the ‘30s in Hollywood, anti-Irish and anti-Catholic sentiment were still pronounced when Kelly married in 1956. “There was still great tension in the ‘50s, but it’s also a time when the Irish kind of win. She is part of th TDS' intuitive design, Georgia Tech says -- wearers use a magnetic piercing in their tongue as a joystick, which is both faster and more logical than puffing into a straw. It's subtler, too, as wearers don't block their faces with as much equipment. Trials have so far been limited to hospitals and labs, but the findings pave the way for real-world tests. Eventually,

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