female.
love.
Solo Cups: Knowledge
I was curious about the lines on solo cups the other weekend and learned something amazing. This information should be taught in an intro class to all high schoolers and college students.
It turns out that the lines of the solo cup allows you to measure out a shot, a glass of wine, and a beer. This would have been ridiculously helpful during my partying years!
If that is accurate, I should be dead from alcohol poisoning.
^Yes.
Mizzou’s Wellness Center gave out magnets with this diagram on them a few months ago, and I took a bunch and snuck one onto the fridge of every house I go to parties at. Be smart, people!
^Of course you did, Margaux. BLESS YOU. Betcha saved lives
Rite in the Rain is a patented, environmentally responsible, all-weather writing paper that sheds water and enables you to write anywhere, in any weather
Envy
Is when someone walks around with a pocket full of “that should’ve been me””
Hate
Is what happens when you put a shotgun to the face of understanding and it cowers in the corner
Truth
Is everything you tell yourself when you realize that no…
This day in history:
Minutes before giving a speech on a campaign stop in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Theodore Roosevelt is shot in an assassination attempt.
The would-be assassin’s bullet is slowed down after travelling through a steel eyeglass case and the folded, fifty page speech he intended to give, stopping in his chest. Realizing that he wasn’t coughing up blood, Roosevelt figured he was well enough to go ahead and deliver his speech rather than rush to the hospital.
He spoke for the next 90 minutes, opening with the words:
“Ladies and gentlemen, I don’t know whether you fully understand that I have just been shot; but it takes more than that to kill a Bull Moose.”
Doctors deemed it too risky to remove the bullet, and Roosevelt carried it with him inside his body for the rest of his life.
October 14, 1912
LIKE A BOSSTHE BEST BOSS
THE BOSS OF THE BOSSES
BOOM.
I DON’T ALWAYS GET SHOT WHILE GIVING A SPEECH…
BUT WHEN I DO, I FINISH THE DAMN SPEECH.
(Source: picturesofwar, via hold-a-wolfs-ears)
(Source: cupsahoy, via obliteratedheart)
In their series ‘silent world’, paris-based, franco-german artistic duo Lucie & Simon use tricks of the photographic trade to render the world’s busiest cities free of cars and even people. Neutral density filters allow photographers to limit light entry without closing the aperture or increasing the shutter speed. the higher the F-stop reduction, the greater the effect, allowing for super-long exposures which make moving objects like people and cars essentially invisible, while only immobile structures remain. extremely high level filters are used by NASA to analyze star patterns. viait’s even more amazing once you read up on how they managed to do it too.
Silent World by Lucie & Simon have captured some of the world’s most populated cities completely devoid of any human activity.
(via hold-a-wolfs-ears)
(Source: anewromantic, via wakeupglamorous)
(Source: sallyintheskywithdiamonds, via hold-a-wolfs-ears)
Catvengers, assemble!
(via hold-a-wolfs-ears)