
Legend has it that there is a coffee bar in Raleigh where, in the Ladies Room there is a very special mirror. If one stands in front of the mirror and tells the truth, one is granted a wish.
However, if one tells a lie ---*poof*--- you are instantly swallowed up by the mirror, never to be seen again.
Soooooo....A Wake Forest student of questionable looks walks into the ladies room and stands before the mirror and says, "I think I'm the most beautiful woman in the world."*Poof* the mirror swallows her up.
Next a rather large Duke student stands before the mirror and says,"I think I'm the sexiest woman alive". *Poof* the mirror swallows her.
Then, a UNC* student comes in and stands before the mirror and says, "I think...". *Poof*
*Please see "comments"
for additional pertinent & germane information.
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Three-Dimensional Creations
ReplyDeleteAn important manuscript long thought lost was rediscovered hiding in a Pennsylvania seminary on a forgotten archival shelf. The recovered manuscript was a working score for a piano version of Ludwig van Beethoven’s “Grosse Fuge,” which means “grand fugue.” Apparently, grand is an understatement. The work is known as a monument of classical music and described by historians as a “symphonic poem” or a “leviathan”--an achievement on the scale of the finale of his Ninth Symphony. The work is one of the last pieces Beethoven composed, during the period when he was completely deaf. The markings throughout the manuscript are in the composer’s own hand.
In fact, such markings are a particular trademark of Beethoven, who was known for near obsessive editing. Unlike Mozart, who typically produced large scores in nearly finished form, Beethoven’s mind was so full of ideas that it was never made up. Never satisfied, he honed his ideas brutally.
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