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An energy-efficient building was the result, designed to prevent many of the little problems that seem to creep into a normal building. [59] For instance, to save time spent buying and decorating a Christmas tree every year, the house has a large (yet unapparent) closet adjacent to the living room where the tree can be stored from year to year.
During college, he began submitting his comic Hector to The Daily Orange his freshman year and later became art director at the newspaper. Hector is a cynical, lazy black college kid who is accompanied by Meatball and Julias; a dog with human ears. [3]
Today I am blessed.” “Being free is being able to accept people for what they are, and not try to understand all they are or be what they are.” “Life offers us tickets to places which we ...
The layout design for these subpages is at Portal:Cartoon Network/Selected quote/Layout. These Quotes subpages are randomly displayed using {{Random portal component}}. Select a new quote attributed to a different character than any of those currently quoted below. (For quote samples and episode titles, see Wikiquote:Special:Search/Cartoon ...
Today, I have over three years of being porn-free. My wife and I were reunited after a two-month separation, but there was still a long road of reparations ahead. Our first marriage had to be ...
All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy; All you need is love [7] All is fair in love and war; All is for the best in the best of all possible worlds; All is well that ends well; An apple a day keeps the doctor away; An army marches on its stomach; An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth
Crankshaft is a comic strip about a character by the same name — an older, curmudgeonly school bus driver —which debuted on June 8, 1987. Written by Tom Batiuk and drawn by Dan Davis, [2] Crankshaft is a spin-off from Batiuk's comic strip Funky Winkerbean. [3]
There it is applied to a hare in flight from a dog that attempts to escape by jumping into the sea, only to be seized by a 'sea-dog'. The Latin equivalent was the seafaring idiom of Scylla and Charybdis , 'He runs on Scylla, wishing to avoid Charybdis' ( incidit in scyllam cupiens vitare charybdim ), a parallel pointed out by Edmund Arwaker in ...