- May 23 Tue 2006 00:23
test-mtv
- May 22 Mon 2006 12:09
Vodkas
- May 16 Tue 2006 17:54
ETERNAL MELODY Ⅱ
- May 16 Tue 2006 17:30
走れ!タカハシ
- May 11 Thu 2006 21:48
The little prince
If I have told you these details about the asteroid, and made a note of
its number for you, it is on account of the grown-ups and their ways.
When you tell them that you have made a new friend, they never ask you
its number for you, it is on account of the grown-ups and their ways.
When you tell them that you have made a new friend, they never ask you
- May 04 Thu 2006 19:32
所謂的"神"
Six degrees of separation is the theory that anyone on earth can be connected to any other person on the planet through a chain of acquaintances that has no more than four intermediaries. The theory was first proposed in 1929 by the Hungarian writer Frigyes Karinthy in a short story called Chains. The concept is based on the idea that the number of acquaintances grows exponentially with the number of links in the chain, and so only a small number of links is required for the set of acquaintances to become the whole human population.
By extension, the same term is often used to describe any other setting in which some form of link exists between individual entities in a large set. For example, "see also" links in a dictionary entry may point the reader to other entries in the same dictionary; after following only six such links, the reader could potentially get to any word in the dictionary that has a link to it. In this special case of a dictionary, it is sometimes called the six links rule.
By extension, the same term is often used to describe any other setting in which some form of link exists between individual entities in a large set. For example, "see also" links in a dictionary entry may point the reader to other entries in the same dictionary; after following only six such links, the reader could potentially get to any word in the dictionary that has a link to it. In this special case of a dictionary, it is sometimes called the six links rule.
- May 01 Mon 2006 12:08
1998夏季甲子園
- Apr 30 Sun 2006 14:50
Paolina Cappuccino Cream Liqueur
For me, though, extra calories are a constant concern so I'm thrilled to witness the introduction of a new, low-fat, milk-based coffee liqueur. Paolina Cappuccino Cream Liqueur ($26.60), named after Napoleon's sister Paolina Bonaparte Borghese, is a delicious new Italian liqueur made using a slimming 1 per cent butterfat milk. I enjoyed it straight and at room temperature (Paolina Nude) but it's delightful on ice or heated and topped with foamed milk or cream. You can also pour it generously over ice cream or tiramisu, add it to Jello instant pudding or mix with rice pudding.
By KONRAD EJBICH
By KONRAD EJBICH
- Apr 28 Fri 2006 10:31
4/16 軟銀對火腿 6局下