Friday, February 1, 2008

blizzard

I feel guilty for not going to class today. Or yesterday. However, the guilt is kind of unnecessary since if I had gone no one would have even been there. School has been cancelled for the last two days due to the MASSIVE amounts of snow all over Pullman. Seriously, it snowed eight feet Thursday night. Actually I'm kidding, it was more like one foot, but it was enough to warrant a state of emergency for eastern Washington.

...So instead of going to class, I decided to be productive with my Friday afternoon. I made a list of: red.



algae!


a red fox





lothian bus on princes street in edinburgh



llamar por telefono


red velvet cAke





and with that said and done, my plan is to walk home and make an irish cream coffee, eat tomato soup and watch my roomates play beer pong:

(just in case anyone would like clarification on the exact details of beer pong, courtesy of wikipedia:
Beer pong (also called Beirut, Ruit, Lob pong and other names) is a drinking game in which players throw a ping pong ball across a table with the intent of landing the ball in one of several cups of beer on the other end. The game typically consists of two two-player teams, one on each side of a table, and a number of cups set up on each side. There are no official rules, so rules may vary widely, though usually there are six, ten or 15 plastic cups arranged in a triangle on each side.[1] The number of players on a team can vary as well, from one to three or more.
When a ball lands in a cup, the defending team must consume that cup's beer. The game is won by eliminating all the other team's cups before one's own cups are eliminated. The losing team must then consume all the beer remaining in the winning team's cups.
[1] The order of play varies – both players on one team shoot followed by both players on the other team, or players on opposite teams can alternate back and forth.[2] If two balls land in the same cup during the same round of play, play continues normally.
Today, beer pong is played at a multitude of North American colleges and universities and elsewhere. )

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