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abbyawesomeness cape holden test May 18, 2011 3:04 PM i bet no one knows my crush cape better then i do!!!! :)
Iveenia MERRY XMAS AND A MARVE NEW YEAR TO ALL OF YOU Dec 19, 2010 11:55 AM :) the first snow in Basel - led to two pictures i loved - here the making of :) wish you all - HEALTH - SUCCESS - LOVE - AND ALL THE BETTER THAN YOU EVER HAD :)
WarEagleNurse The Pink House Oct 15, 2010 7:04 AM Gorgeous: the White House lit in pink to mark BreastCancer awareness month. http://twitpic.com/2xr9a7
WarEagleNurse 180-Day Happy Meal Art Project Oct 12, 2010 1:56 PM http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/180-Day-Happy-Meal-Art-Project/ss/events/lf/101210happymealart#photoViewer=/ydownload/20101012/photos_net_web_yn/1286906638
WarEagleNurse Hand Gestures Seem to Give Politicians' True Feelings Away Oct 6, 2010 3:58 PM If you want to know the true thoughts of a politician, watch his or her hand movements, a new study suggests. "In laboratory tests, right- and left-handers associate positive ideas like honesty and intelligence with their dominant side of space and negative ideas with their non-dominant side," study author Daniel Casasanto, of the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in the Netherlands, said in an institute news release. To find out if this link between "good" and "dominant" applies in the real world, Casasanto and colleague Kyle Jasmin studied tapes of the final debates in the 2004 and 2008 U.S. presidential elections. The investigators found that right-handed candidates (John Kerry, George W. Bush) made a greater proportion of right-hand gestures when expressing positive ideas, and left-hand gestures when expressing negative thoughts, while the two left-handers (Barack Obama, John McCain) used their left hand more for positive ideas and their right hand for negative thoughts. "Overall, the data support the idea that people associate good things with the side of their body they can use most fluently -- dominant is fluent, and fluent is good," Casasanto stated in the news release. The hand that politicians use when speaking may offer insight into how they feel about what they're saying, he added. The study was published online July 28 in the journal PLoS One.