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Right now 1.1 billion people on
the planet don't have access to safe, clean drinking water.
That's one in six of us. Many communities in developing
nations often have a plentiful supply of clean drinking water
just below the ground, but no way to get to it. This is where
charity: water and their partner organizations come in.
Drilling a well can cost from $4,000 - $12,000 USD and many
living on less than $1 a day cannot afford one in their
community, even if the money is combined.
I want to help!
Related links:
Photos of
their GOOD work!
Trees
for the Future on flickr
Celestial Seasonings promotes trees for the future
New
fun funky links!
funky and fun links ~ what's new?
May 2009
NYTimes: What is a
hug?
BBC: Crop
diversity: Eat it or lose it
Scary Ghost Story:
Waverly Hills Asylum
Big Picture on Posterous:
why
did the bear cross the bridge?
University chief holds virtual meeting
Pretty! votive cut
paper cuffs
Jigsaw fans: jigsaw break
Awesome sandcastles
Science Blog: the
science of lapdancing
Apr 2009
Mar 2009
Feb 2009
Jan 2009
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Father's Day
Double DBS!
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~ Life:
Enjoy the Ride by Lee Monday Life: enjoy the ride! Good
advice? Definitely great FUN book!
~ Queen of
Fashion: What Marie Antoinette Wore to the Revolution presents
Marie Antoinette as a hapless 14-year-old whose mother,
Empress Maria Theresa, warned her, "All eyes will be fixed on
you."
More
NEW BOOKS!
Virtual Vintage: The Insider's Guide to Buying and Selling
Fashion Online
Audrey, Jackie, Grace: Fashion trifecta In an age when the
word is grossly overused, they remain, incontrovertibly,
icons: Elegance embodied, high fashion at the dawn of the
television era, with charmed lives and striking beauty.
Queen of Fashion: What Marie Antoinette Wore to the
Revolution
presents
Marie Antoinette as a hapless 14-year-old whose mother,
Empress Maria Theresa, warned her, "All eyes will be fixed
on you." In the end, as we all know, she miscalculated. "Yet
for the moment," Weber writes, "the larger society she
sought out proved an avid market for her iconoclastic,
elegant image. For the staunchest devotees of the modes she
launched, neither printed matter nor in-store gossip could
compare with a direct sighting of Marie Antoinette."
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New articles:
Women talk three times as much as
men, says study Women talk almost three times as
much as men, with the average woman chalking up 20,000 words
in a day - 13,000 more than the average man. Women also speak
more quickly, devote more brainpower to chit-chat - and
actually get a buzz out of hearing their own voices, a new
book suggests.
But what the male brain
may lack in conversation and emotion, they more than make up
with in their ability to think about sex.... Dr Brizendine says the brain's "sex processor" - the areas
responsible for sexual thoughts - is twice as big as in men
than in women, perhaps explaining why men are stereotyped as
having sex on the mind.
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