USMB Coffee Shop IV


Saw them on Pinterest and yes, beautiful. I tried copy and pasting them too and here they are.

ae30fc02d1f79811c20f27d975118b75.jpg
 
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We've had bad weather today, and my server won't let me stay online more than 5 minutes. I think the weather is my server. Anyway, hope everyone is having a lovely weekend. It's quiet around here... out in the middle of the country. *sigh*
 
Well I gotta say a big howdy to one of the bravest men I know. A Dallas Cowboy fan in the bosom of Steeler Country! SFC Ollie! March on, Sergeant.

For what it's worth, I texted the schedule for Movie Night at the Learning Center to the woman in charge of the Facebook presence of the Learning Center. I changed it from Wednesday at 7:00 to Thursday at 6:30. Too many Wednesday night church services. Who am I to compete with God and Bingo?

So, with a wider audience in sight, I'm swinging for the fences.

Thursday September 5, Humphrey Bogart and Lorene Bacall in To Have and Have Not. "You know how to whistle don't you, Steve? You just put your lips together and blow."

September 12, what I personally consider the sweetest movie ever made, To Kill a Mockingbird.

September 19, melodrama at its best, Joan Crawford as Mildred Pierce. Don't forget about the great character performance of Eve Arden.

On Thursday the 26, Gary Cooper, Grace Kelly in Fred Zinnemann's High Noon.

That's the first month anyway. I am proud to say that the popcorn machine is up and running, well stocked with corn and boxes from which to eat it. So we'll get the fresh popped aroma going for us.

One woman suggested a margarita machine. Wishful thinking, but I like her style.
 
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Had to laugh when clicking on this link...……. the other 'related pics' along the bottom of the page that show 'Eye Candy' as young hunky guys :badgrin:


BUT you do have a resourceful talent going there. Good for you. Just let me know if you need more rocks, cause I got plenty to share :banghead:
Maybe Gracie could do a "rocks from all states" series?
Maybe an ice cube for Alaska?
 
Well I gotta say a big howdy to one of the bravest men I know. A Dallas Cowboy fan in the bosom of Steeler Country! SFC Ollie! March on, Sergeant.

For what it's worth, I texted the schedule for Movie Night at the Learning Center to the woman in charge of the Facebook presence of the Learning Center. I changed it from Wednesday at 7:00 to Thursday at 6:30. Too many Wednesday night church services. Who am I to compete with God and Bingo?

So, with a wider audience in sight, I'm swinging for the fences.

Thursday September 5, Humphrey Bogart and Lorene Bacall in To Have and Have Not. "You know how to whistle don't you, Steve? You just put your lips together and blow."

September 12, what I personally consider the sweetest movie ever made, To Kill a Mockingbird.

September 19, melodrama at its best, Joan Crawford as Mildred Pierce. Don't forget about the great character performance of Eve Arden.

On Thursday the 26, Gary Cooper, Grace Kelly in Fred Zinnemann's High Noon.

That's the first month anyway. I am proud to say that the popcorn machine is up and running, well stocked with corn and boxes from which to eat it. So we'll get the fresh popped aroma going for us.

One woman suggested a margarita machine. Wishful thinking, but I like her style.

I have an extensive movie collection consisting of a number of the what I consider some of the great all time movies, but mostly movies that we never get tired of and can watch over and over. "To Kill a Mockingbird" is not one you choose to watch over and over, but IMO it is one of the most perfect films with an incredible story line in the collection. Beautiful filmology, wonderful direction, great acting, great character development, great plot. It has it all. And I have to agree that it is one of the sweetest movies ever made.

If I lived in East Liverpool though, I would attend your movie nights Nosmo. :)
 
Well I gotta say a big howdy to one of the bravest men I know. A Dallas Cowboy fan in the bosom of Steeler Country! SFC Ollie! March on, Sergeant.

For what it's worth, I texted the schedule for Movie Night at the Learning Center to the woman in charge of the Facebook presence of the Learning Center. I changed it from Wednesday at 7:00 to Thursday at 6:30. Too many Wednesday night church services. Who am I to compete with God and Bingo?

So, with a wider audience in sight, I'm swinging for the fences.

Thursday September 5, Humphrey Bogart and Lorene Bacall in To Have and Have Not. "You know how to whistle don't you, Steve? You just put your lips together and blow."

September 12, what I personally consider the sweetest movie ever made, To Kill a Mockingbird.

September 19, melodrama at its best, Joan Crawford as Mildred Pierce. Don't forget about the great character performance of Eve Arden.

On Thursday the 26, Gary Cooper, Grace Kelly in Fred Zinnemann's High Noon.

That's the first month anyway. I am proud to say that the popcorn machine is up and running, well stocked with corn and boxes from which to eat it. So we'll get the fresh popped aroma going for us.

One woman suggested a margarita machine. Wishful thinking, but I like her style.

I have an extensive movie collection consisting of a number of the what I consider some of the great all time movies, but mostly movies that we never get tired of and can watch over and over. "To Kill a Mockingbird" is not one you choose to watch over and over, but IMO it is one of the most perfect films with an incredible story line in the collection. Beautiful filmology, wonderful direction, great acting, great character development, great plot. It has it all. And I have to agree that it is one of the sweetest movies ever made.

If I lived in East Liverpool though, I would attend your movie nights Nosmo. :)
In October I'm showing Citizen Kane, A Streetcar named Desire, Charlie Chaplin's Modern Times and Boris Karloff as Frankenstein on Halloween night.
 
From where I am sitting I can read the titles on the backs of my cd collection and here are a few of them.

' The lion in winter' and ' seven samurai' and 'Andrei Rublev ' and 'when worlds collide' And
' Caligula' (the uncut version of Caligula which is hard core porn)

and 'a beautiful mind' and 'flying daggers' and 'dune' and 'all quiet on the western front' and ' troy' and 'Alexandra'

After that it gets into more commercial films like' the matrix trilogy' and 'Xmen' and 'lord of the rings trilogy'
 
From where I am sitting I can read the titles on the backs of my cd collection and here are a few of them.

' The lion in winter' and ' seven samurai' and 'Andrei Rublev ' and 'when worlds collide' And
' Caligula' (the uncut version of Caligula which is hard core porn)

and 'a beautiful mind' and 'flying daggers' and 'dune' and 'all quiet on the western front' and ' troy' and 'Alexandra'

After that it gets into more commercial films like' the matrix trilogy' and 'Xmen' and 'lord of the rings trilogy'

Is that the 80s Dune movie? I didn't like that, but I did very much enjoy the miniseries of Dune that the ScyFy channel did in 2000.
 
From where I am sitting I can read the titles on the backs of my cd collection and here are a few of them.

' The lion in winter' and ' seven samurai' and 'Andrei Rublev ' and 'when worlds collide' And
' Caligula' (the uncut version of Caligula which is hard core porn)

and 'a beautiful mind' and 'flying daggers' and 'dune' and 'all quiet on the western front' and ' troy' and 'Alexandra'

After that it gets into more commercial films like' the matrix trilogy' and 'Xmen' and 'lord of the rings trilogy'

My own collection is too lengthy to list--in fact I don't have a list. Should make one. "The Matrix" however is one of those iconic films I don't have yet but need to add to the group. It is one of those films that you can't describe adequately--it must be seen--but you cannot not watch if you happen to run across it on television somewhere. As with many sequels that rarely match up to the original, Matrix II lacked some of the genius in the original, but it was more fun to watch. :)
 
From where I am sitting I can read the titles on the backs of my cd collection and here are a few of them.

' The lion in winter' and ' seven samurai' and 'Andrei Rublev ' and 'when worlds collide' And
' Caligula' (the uncut version of Caligula which is hard core porn)

and 'a beautiful mind' and 'flying daggers' and 'dune' and 'all quiet on the western front' and ' troy' and 'Alexandra'

After that it gets into more commercial films like' the matrix trilogy' and 'Xmen' and 'lord of the rings trilogy'

Is that the 80s Dune movie? I didn't like that, but I did very much enjoy the miniseries of Dune that the ScyFy channel did in 2000.

My version of Dune is probably the one from the 1980's its by David Lynch and Dino de Laurentis.
 
From where I am sitting I can read the titles on the backs of my cd collection and here are a few of them.

' The lion in winter' and ' seven samurai' and 'Andrei Rublev ' and 'when worlds collide' And
' Caligula' (the uncut version of Caligula which is hard core porn)

and 'a beautiful mind' and 'flying daggers' and 'dune' and 'all quiet on the western front' and ' troy' and 'Alexandra'

After that it gets into more commercial films like' the matrix trilogy' and 'Xmen' and 'lord of the rings trilogy'

My own collection is too lengthy to list--in fact I don't have a list. Should make one. "The Matrix" however is one of those iconic films I don't have yet but need to add to the group. It is one of those films that you can't describe adequately--it must be seen--but you cannot not watch if you happen to run across it on television somewhere. As with many sequels that rarely match up to the original, Matrix II lacked some of the genius in the original, but it was more fun to watch. :)

I have quite a lot more films I didn't list, ' for example 'the abominable Dr Phibes' and ' Dr Phibes rises again '
Always good for a laugh.
 

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