My illustrious ( and "My" is not possessive) Governor (Dayton) has cancelled public schools for tomorrow...."In the interest of Public safety". However...there is a song I heard once. As I recall it was written by some guys in Fargo. "Forty Below Keeps the Riff-Raff Out"
I actually HAVE read an explanation, though it cited no sources so I hesitate to mention it here.
While I am not a "believer" (I know of a number of environment conditions blamed on "global warming" which have proven to have other explanations), I do think it important to separate weather from climate. If it's cold here in Minnesota in January, that's just typical weather. A long-term trend or changes in long-term trends in other parts of the world (the earth is a more or less closed system after all)....that would be another matter.
climate CHANGE not warming anymore. here's my deep freeze story. it was early ninties and we lived in this old (1840) house in Downers Grove. The garage was big enough for a model T but not our car. so for days it sat in the driveway with below 20's as the high, not starting. My husband was not far from the train station so he bundled up well but decided to forgo the shirt and tie and wore wool turtlenecks instead. When he got downtown Chicago, and off the train, he had to cross a bridge over a Lake Michigan causeway to the where his building was. Lots of frigid wind whipping off the ice and blasting the commuters. He finally gets to work, begins to thaw out when the new jr partner comes in to his office and asks "where's your tie, big guy?" Now my husband is not one for conforming to stupid protocol in the first place so replies-"where's yours?" the jr partner is taken back at this insubordination and sputters "you-yo-you know I have a back problem and can't wear one for long periods of time." "No, I didn't know and don't care why you're not wearing a tie-why are you asking about mine?" "We have a dress code in this office, you are well aware." "yes, but it's been 20 below the last several days and I'm walking some distance to get here in the cold. what does this have to do with patent law?" anyway the argument reached a stalemate and shortly after-a senior partner came in and started in in. My husband said if the lead senior partner (the one who gave him all of his work) said he had to wear a tie when it was this cold he'd talk to him. No one brought it up again.It's another one of those perilous, nowadays, it's hard to get him to button his Hawaiian shirt for work. ;)
We are only going to 9 below. I guess that aint so bad. So would they actually lose a great lawyer if they didn't wear a tie? How strict were they with that?
Chicago is like the east coast about suits. He moved on from the firm very quickly. Much later, a crazed gunman burst into the law firm, killing several people and wounding many others.
before galting- Colorado Springs I'm having deja vu here. maybe we already discussed this. there are some great events going on you might like. Pikes Peak Economics Club for example. Yaron Brook spoke last year for example. Dr. Prentice was an economist in the Reagan administration. I'll post the next speaker.
"Freeze the balls off a Brass Monkey" Naval origin: "Monkey" is the brass base upon which cannon ball were stacked. Differential thermal contraction would shrink the "Monkey" and cause the balls to fall off. Freezing one's "balls" off.....derivative.
I've never run across anything substantive...I love colloquialisms, so search them out regularly. Only references are contemporary interpretations of suckling the "Devils" "spawn" and being heartless (cold).
I hear Beastie Boys in my head when the brass monkey is tossed about.
However...there is a song I heard once. As I recall it was written by some guys in Fargo.
"Forty Below Keeps the Riff-Raff Out"
http://youtu.be/50_iRIcxsz0
Sorry. Couldn't resist - and I know it's hot in Australia...
While I am not a "believer" (I know of a number of environment conditions blamed on "global warming" which have proven to have other explanations), I do think it important to separate weather from climate. If it's cold here in Minnesota in January, that's just typical weather. A long-term trend or changes in long-term trends in other parts of the world (the earth is a more or less closed system after all)....that would be another matter.
here's my deep freeze story. it was early ninties and we lived in this old (1840) house in Downers Grove. The garage was big enough for a model T but not our car. so for days it sat in the driveway with below 20's as the high, not starting. My husband was not far from the train station so he bundled up well but decided to forgo the shirt and tie and wore wool turtlenecks instead. When he got downtown Chicago, and off the train, he had to cross a bridge over a Lake Michigan causeway to the where his building was. Lots of frigid wind whipping off the ice and blasting the commuters. He finally gets to work, begins to thaw out when the new jr partner comes in to his office and asks "where's your tie, big guy?"
Now my husband is not one for conforming to stupid protocol in the first place so replies-"where's yours?" the jr partner is taken back at this insubordination and sputters "you-yo-you know I have a back problem and can't wear one for long periods of time." "No, I didn't know and don't care why you're not wearing a tie-why are you asking about mine?"
"We have a dress code in this office, you are well aware." "yes, but it's been 20 below the last several days and I'm walking some distance to get here in the cold. what does this have to do with patent law?" anyway the argument reached a stalemate and shortly after-a senior partner came in and started in in. My husband said if the lead senior partner (the one who gave him all of his work) said he had to wear a tie when it was this cold he'd talk to him. No one brought it up again.It's another one of those perilous,
nowadays, it's hard to get him to button his Hawaiian shirt for work. ;)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_IlNbsIL...
I'm having deja vu here. maybe we already discussed this. there are some great events going on you might like. Pikes Peak Economics Club for example. Yaron Brook spoke last year for example. Dr. Prentice was an economist in the Reagan administration. I'll post the next speaker.
Naval origin: "Monkey" is the brass base upon which cannon ball were stacked. Differential thermal contraction would shrink the "Monkey" and cause the balls to fall off.
Freezing one's "balls" off.....derivative.
Rouse the dogs early, pee on the runners and get a little "run" in while it's still "brisk".
have a sick welsh .not looking good...
"....and it's strange how the "music" changes when they disappear..." Poem / song "Molley O'Malley's