Choosing Topics



Choosing Info ...

Wigging Out- Tips For Choosing And Wearing A Wig ... Synthetic or man-made wigs have lots of benefits. They hold their style well even under unfavorable weather conditions such as humidity, cold temperatures and a tremendous amount of rain...

A Quick Guide To Choosing Cats ... A good question that you need to consider is if you are looking to get a male or a female cat. There is a vast difference between the two species just as there is with humans or any other type of animal...

Choosing Every Wedding Cake Accessory ... Cake Topper Your most important wedding cake accessory would probably be your cake topper. Choose a custom made piece for this wedding cake accessory that will go well with both your theme and your personality...

Choosing The Right Pet Bird ... Before getting yourself a feathered friend, there are some things you need to answer first • Can you still care for a bird?  Birds are social creatures, they also need time.  So make sure that you or your family still have the time to care for a bird.. ...

Great Tips For Choosing Furniture ... Here’s some helpful tips on getting the most value for your money, and choosing furniture that will work with your home and your lifestyle...

Why is it that no photograph of a person has the depth a painted portrait can have? The two embody different quantities of time. A photograph is a “snapshot,” whether or not it was posed; it shows one particular moment of time and what the person looked like right then, what his surface showed. During the extended hours a painting is sat for, though, its subject shows a range of traits, emotions, and thoughts, all revealed in differing lights. Combining different glimpses of the person, choosing an aspect here, a tightening of muscle there, a glint of light, a deepening of line, the painter interweaves these different portions of surface, never before simultaneously exhibited, to produce a fuller portrait and a deeper one. The portraitist can select one tiny aspect of everything shown at a moment to incorporate into the final painting.
—Robert Nozick (b. 1938)

Some of the smartest women in the country said that they’re too embarrassed to attend their reunions at Harvard Business School if they have dropped out of the work force, left the fast track by choosing part-time work, or decided to follow anything other than the standard male career path.
—Deborah J. Swiss (20th century)

Politics is not the art of the possible. It consists in choosing between the disastrous and the unpalatable.
—John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)