0
POPSNewspaper Not Dead - At Least for Today A total run on newspapers as people snatch them up for mementos. Somehow storing the internet article on your hard drive is not quite the same as sticking the front page of the newspaper in a box in the attic.
2
POPSThe White House On List of Creepy Places That's right, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C. is not only home to the current President of the United States, it also is home of several former presidents who occasionally decide to make their presences known there, despite the fact that they are dead. President Harrison is said to be heard rummaging around in the attic of the White House, looking for who knows what. President Andrew Jackson is thought to haunt his White House bedroom. And the ghost of First Lady Abigail Adams was seen floating through one of the White House hallways, as if carrying something. The most frequently sighted presidential ghost has been that of Abraham Lincoln. Eleanor Roosevelt once stated she believed she felt the presence of Lincoln watching her as she worked in the Lincoln bedroom. Also during the Roosevelt administration, a young clerk claimed to have actually seen the ghost of Lincoln sitting on a bed pulling off his boots.
0
POPSzodiacal.com Astro Resources Useful Stuff » Databases » Educational » Libraries » Research » Gadgets » Publishers » Periodicals MISC » Astrologer's Attic » Astrologer's Garden » Astrolog Mini-FAQ » Biorythym Chart »
3
POPSMuslim Woman Demands Obama Apology hahahahahahaha--the Onion strikes again--but I see that the Rethuglican hatchet men are really blasting Obama for this... and his apology was kinda lame--"some low level volunteers did it"...duh, Oh, right, Barack, I beleieve that! As far as I'm concerned the guy needs to maintain his integrity before I lose all respect for him. If he doesn't trust people with the truth, how can we believe in his message? This recent political expediency sucks!
5
POPSForgotten Luggage "The Frenchwoman in whose trunk Edwardian elegance mingled with modern scholarship was transferred among several psychiatric hospitals for her first few years in the system. Still deep in the grips of her obsession with the supernatural, she arrived at Willard State in 1939 at age 43. For decades, she would speak only to demand her release. She developed permanent Parkinsonian symptoms from the drugs she was given. She was discharged to a rooming house in a nearby community in her 80s (“There is no evidence of gross psychiatric symptomatology,” her last physician wrote) and died at 90. She never reclaimed her trunk."