Time Cover - Enough
Cosmic Funnies

tannertan36
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Peter Solarz

Kiana Khansmith
todays bird

shark vs the universe
Sade Olutola
RMH

ellievsbear
NASA
Game of Thrones Daily
AnasAbdin
Xuebing Du
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
KIROKAZE

Andulka
tumblr dot com

Show & Tell
seen from United States

seen from T1

seen from Portugal

seen from Germany
seen from Maldives

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from India
seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Philippines

seen from United States

seen from Norway

seen from South Korea

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@thursdayfilebuzz
Time Cover - Enough

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Cover - New York - The Corruption of Trump
Empty stations, deserted platforms and millions of frustrated travelers. Photo: Commuters trying to get home on Tuesday evening from the Gare de Lyon railroad station in Paris, on the first day of a rail strike. - by Ludovic Marin // A rail strike in France is testing the limits of public anger as union workers face off against President Emmanuel Macron and his efforts to overhaul Europe’s second-largest economy — starting with cuts to their cherished job benefits. But whether French commuters, including those above in Paris on Tuesday, blame the union or Mr. Macron is the big question. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/04/world/france-rail-strike-stranded-commuters.html
April’s Gallery is Up and I hope you take a little time and visit, thanks - Steven
www.thursdayfiile.com
TV Guide starts publishing in the U.S. April 3, 1953: Television in the 1940s was an era of excitement and chaos. The medium was growing exponentially – new shows, new stars, new networks – far faster than the casual viewer could keep up. Want to know if Our Miss Brooks is on? Tough luck, pal, check your TV every night. A huge gap in the marketplace existed, and on April 3, 1953, one publication arrived to fill it. The first issue of TV Guide even contained a scoop: the first photo of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz’s baby. More important, its listings allowed people to plan their TV watching in advance, all in one handy, digest-sized publication. The weekly magazine was an immediate hit. The circulation peaked at 20 million by 1970, and in 1977 a Canadian version was launched. Eventually, with the rise of the internet in the 1990s, readers could find TV listings everywhere – and at no cost. It was the beginning of the end for TV Guide Canada, which stopped printing in 2006. The U.S. magazine, however, continues to limp along. But when TV shows are available online at any time, there’s no longer a risk of missing your favourite. It may be time to pull the plug. – Ken Carriere
---------- Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > April 05, 2018 > The Thursday File #718 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
come visit at www.thursdayfile.com
Note: Thomas Loren Friedman is an American journalist, columnist and author. He writes a twice-weekly column for The New York Times and has written extensively on foreign affairs including global trade, the Middle East, globalization, and environmental issues, and has won the Pulitzer Prize three times. ------------------------- "This is code red" by Brian Stelter and the CNN Media team - Feb 20 2018 "Our democracy is in serious danger," Thomas L. Friedman wrote. "President Trump is either totally compromised by the Russians or is a towering fool, or both, but either way he has shown himself unwilling or unable to defend America against a Russian campaign to divide and undermine our democracy." That's a quote from Friedman's newest column, which came out on NYTimes.com Sunday night. His column normally appears in print on Wednesdays, so this one was just for the web. It has received an enormous amount of attention. More than 2,600 comments and still growing. As Friedman told me: "Not my day. Not in print. And it may be the most widely circulated column I've ever written." His column -- titled "Whatever Trump Is Hiding Is Hurting All of Us Now" -- has been at the top of the NYT's "most emailed" and "popular on Facebook" lists all day. I noticed people who are usually virulent Friedman critics praising him for writing it. There's something about the last paragraph, in particular, that struck a chord. "This is code red," he wrote. "The biggest threat to the integrity of our democracy today is in the Oval Office." So I called Friedman to find out how the column came about... Friedman: Something about Trump is "deeply off" On Sunday morning Friedman was driving up to Baltimore for a golf lesson... On the ride, he was thinking about Trump's tweets reacting to the new indictments... And he felt like he had to write something... Friedman: "Mueller told us the core of our democracy -- our electoral system -- had been attacked by Russia. And Trump was focused exclusively on what Mueller's report said, or did not say, about him." "To me, it really crossed a line," Friedman told me. While Trump has "broken many norms as president," last weekend belonged in a different category. In Friedman's view, "he's no longer violating norms of the presidency, he's actually violating his oath to defend and protect the Constitution." So he emailed a paragraph-long pitch to Jim Dao and James Bennett -- saying he had to write a column, just for the web, to express himself -- something he's done from time to time. "Hey, go for it," was the response from the editors, he said. Later in the day, back at home, he wrote the column in two hours and ten minutes. "What I've learned as a columnist over the years is, when you write the right column at the right time, articulating a feeling that many people have but maybe didn't know quite how to express, you can get a big reaction." He cautioned: "This doesn't happen very often." Bottom line: Friedman said "there was something in Trump's reaction to Mueller that was deeply off." It was "so unpresidential, it was frightening..." -- Whatever Trump Is Hiding Is Hurting All of Us Now https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/18/opinion/trump-russia-putin.html ------------------------------ Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > February 22, 2018 > The Thursday File #712 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com
"Black Panther" reigns at the box office Frank Pallotta emails: "Black Panther" didn't just exceed expectations, it shattered them. ( http://money.cnn.com/2018/02/18/media/black-panther-box-office/index.html ) Through Sunday, Marvel's first film with an African-American director (Ryan Coogler!) has made an estimated $192 million in the U.S. and $361 million globally. That total is the second biggest opening for Marvel Studios behind only "The Avengers;" the largest opening in the history of February; and the largest opening for an African-American director ever. All hail the king... --> BTW: Those #'s are just through Sunday -- and Monday is President's Day -- Disney projects it will bring in $218 million domestically for the holiday weekend... -- Andrew Wallenstein tweeted: "Looks like Disney has itself another billion-dollar franchise. The question is, how far north of 10 figures will it end up by the end of its global run?" "Breaking down cinematic barriers" Paul Dergarabedian told Pallotta: "'Black Panther' exceeded even the grandest box office expectations while simultaneously breaking down cinematic barriers and marking a turning point in the evolution of the genre..." - CNN - Reliable Sources -- After ‘Black Panther’ and ‘Wonder Woman,’ It’s Time for the Myth of the Fanboy to Fade Hollywood studio executives who are overgrown fanboys need to stop using the young-male demo as an excuse to make whatever they want. ( http://variety.com/2018/film/news/its-time-for-the-myth-of-the-fanboy-to-fade-black-panther-wonder-woman-1202703426/ ) ----------------------- Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > February 22, 2018 > The Thursday File #712 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com
Trump's courtroom battles over global warming -- Chart: Adapted from Adler, "U.S. Climate Change Litigation In the Age of Trump: Year One"; Note: Lawsuits studied are from 2017; Chart: Axios Visuals -- A newly published paper ( http://columbiaclimatelaw.com/files/2018/02/Adler-2018-02-U.S.-Climate-Change-Litigation-in-the-Age-of-Trump-Year-One.pdf ) from the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law looks carefully at the many legal battles over climate change that got underway during President Trump's first year. Nearly three-fourths seek to uphold or advance climate policies. Why it matters: The courts are an important battleground for climate policy, in part because unwinding or freezing a predecessor's policies often requires careful bureaucratic and legal spadework that provides opponents with avenues for litigation. The study: Columbia Law School fellow Dena P. Adler explored 82 cases, most of which were filed last year, while a few were prior cases that "pivoted" in response to Trump's deregulatory push. >> The study breaks down the cases in numerous ways, including a look at the different policy areas the cases address (see chart above). >> 2 Overall, 73% are what she calls "pro" cases — that is, plaintiffs are seeking to advance or uphold climate policies and safeguards. The balance are "con" cases that she says are designed to "undermine climate protection or support climate policy deregulation." What's next: "Though courts have issued a few decisions and litigation has pressured agencies to publish some outstanding rules, the 'stickiness' of these outcomes remains uncertain. Neither of these results preclude an agency from subsequently rolling back the policies at issue through the rulemaking process," she writes.
Read the full story here. https://www.axios.com/breaking-down-trumps-courtroom-battles-over-global-warming-1518781697-76a28a67-7148-4d89-9c58-3d3336c2ac1e.html ---------- Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > February 22, 2018 > The Thursday File #712 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com
I remember when this happened after Sandy Hook. After Orlando. After Sutherland Springs. After Las Vegas. It happened again on Wednesday. // At first the news reports are by definition incomplete. "Multiple casualties." "At least one dead." Awful but all too normal in America. Then comes the jolt. The realization that this murder spree is orders of magnitude bigger than first thought. The reminder that a single man (almost always a man), often with a single gun, could end so many lives. // On Wednesday, this moment came right around 6pm ET, about three hours after the gunman attacked Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. News outlets had been reporting at least two dead. The sheriff's office had said there were "at least 14 victims," but didn't delineate between injuries and fatalities. Hopefully, hopefully, the sheriff meant injuries. But no. At 5:50pm, ABC cited two law enforcement sources who said at least 15 people were dead in the attack. At 6:04pm, CNN reported "at least 16." Right now the death toll stands at 17. Just try, try to imagine being a student at MSD. You might well be afraid to go to sleep tonight, afraid of the nightmares. Or you might lie there dreading the day you will have to wake up and go back to the crime scene to learn... - Brian Stelter, CNN: Reliable Sources.
Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > February 22, 2018 > The Thursday File #712 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
10,000 Homeless Migrants' in Italy as Election Nears by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - February 08, 2018 Photo I: African migrants trying to reach a rescue boat in the Mediterranean Sea near Sabratha, Libya ROME — A humanitarian group says some 10,000 homeless migrants in Italy are living in makeshift settlements, occupying abandoned buildings or out in the open while their asylum bids are being processed. Doctors Without Borders released a survey Thursday of migrant housing in Italy, amid an election campaign that has been marred by a violent anti-immigrant shooting spree last week and calls by leading politicians for mass migrant expulsions. About half of the homeless migrants were squatting in abandoned buildings. Another third were living in the open, while the rest were in tents, shacks and containers. The nonprofit said 15 had died since the end of 2016 trying to get to France along the "death pass" through the Alps used during World War II by Jews. -- Notes: 1 - The Italian elections is on March 4, 2018 2 - Matteo Salvini, 44 years old - Northern League Photo II: Matteo Salvini, center, began his campaign before Italy’s election in March at a Roma camp in Via Germagnano, on the outskirts of Turin. Perhaps no issue has struck a greater chord with voters than immigration, and perhaps no Italian politician has voiced concerns about immigration more than Mr. Salvini. He is not only a favorite of Marine Le Pen of France, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia and nationalist politicians across Europe. Some fear that Mr. Salvini, while now aligned with former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi in a center-right coalition, could eventually join forces with the populist Five Star Movement, which echoes his strong anti-immigrant and anti-European Union message. Together they would be an anti-establishment nightmare. ---------- Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > February 01, 2018 > The Thursday File #710 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com
‘Frasier’ Star John Mahoney Dies at 77 By Kirsten Chuba John Mahoney, best known for playing Martin Crane on 11 seasons of “Frasier,” died in Chicago on Sunday while in hospice care, his manager, Paul Martino, confirmed. He was 77. Mahoney played the father of Kelsey Grammer and David Hyde Pierce’s characters during the show’s run on NBC from 1993 to 2004. He won a SAG Award and received two Emmy and two Golden Globe nominations for his work on “Frasier.” He was also a mainstay of Chicago’s theater community and a Tony winner in 1986 for his work on Broadway in John Guare’s “The House of Blue Leaves.” From 2011 to 2014, Mahoney had a recurring role on “Hot in Cleveland” as Roy, the love interest of Betty White’s character, Elka. He was much praised for his performance as an anguished CEO in psychological counseling on Season 2 of HBO’s “In Treatment” in 2009. Producer Greg Berlanti credited Mahoney with allowing him to secure a greenlight for his first feature, the 2000 romantic comedy “The Broken Hearts Club.” “He never wavered in his belief in me — a first time director,” Berlanti said via Twitter. “And he was even more kind than he was brilliant.” Mahoney worked in film for more than 35 years, appearing in classics like “The American President,” “Moonstruck,” “In the Line of Fire,” and “Say Anything,” along with voicing animated characters in the “Antz” and “Atlantis” films. He also had guest spots in a number of TV shows including “Cheers,” the forerunner of “Frasier” (although he played a different character), and “3rd Rock from the Sun.” Born in Blackpool, England, the actor started his career in theater and continued to return to the stage, appearing in “Prelude to a Kiss” on Broadway and “The Outgoing Tide” and “The Birthday Party” in Chicago after “Frasier” ended. He came to the U.S. at age 19 and taught English at Western Illinois University; Mahoney was already in his late thirties when he began working with Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre ensemble, which needed an actor who could play older roles. Mahoney never married and had no children. ------------ Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > February 08, 2018 > The Thursday File #711 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com
Moment in Time Guy Fawkes is executed “January 31, 1606: It was a terrorist plot in the heart of London that laid bare tensions in a society divided over religious intolerance. And it played out more than 400 years ago, before "terrorism" was even a word. On this date in 1606, Guy Fawkes (a.k.a. Guido) and three of his 12 co-conspirators died for their role in the Gunpowder Plot, which the famous rhyme helps us remember had been derailed on the fifth of November. The aim of the Catholic militants had been to blow up the English Parliament, killing all the politicians, the Protestant King James and his heir. But authorities were tipped off and Fawkes was found in the cellar with the incriminating powder. The sentence for treason was to be drawn, hanged and quartered – a punishment even more gruesome than it sounds because the hanging was often brief enough that dismemberment could begin on living bodies. But Fawkes, weak from torture during his interrogation, feebly mounted the scaffold and jumped, breaking his neck. Beyond Bonfire Nights and Guy Fawkes masks, the reverberations of the whole affair were profound: The plight of the religious minority worsened as the wider group was blamed for the actions of a few fanatics.” – Joy Yokoyama ---------- Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > February 01, 2018 > The Thursday File #710 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com
Letter from the Editor: The announcement last week that exhibitions by Chuck Close and Thomas Roma were indefinitely postponed at the National Gallery of Art has sparked a lot of passionate conversations around the topic of sexual harassment and what should be done after it is revealed. Some have been rushing to defend Close and Roma, sometimes suggesting that the women shouldn't be believed or that the exhibitions' postponement amounts to a form of censorship. On the other side, many people are feeling a sense of relief that there are repercussions for these actions. It's a complicated issue, and that we can agree on. Perhaps I shouldn't reduce the nuance to two sides, but it can often feel that stark. While the exhibitions have been "indefinitely postponed," I personally don't believe it's fair to characterize the decision as a form of censorship. No works were removed or deaccessioned, and I don't think anyone is entitled to an exhibition at a major public institution. But what do we do now? These are uncharted territories for the art community. The alarmists want to point out that in the past many artists did horrible things, but I think that's simply irrelevant. We're discussing living artists and their impact on people around us, not remote stories from another era or land. Artist Nancy Baker reminded me that there was a Guerrilla Girls poster from a few decades ago that read, "When Racism & Sexism Are No Longer Fashionable, What Will Your Art Collection Be Worth?" Good question, and, of course, the Guerrilla Girls were ahead of the curve. Let's figure this out together. - Hrag Vartanian is editor-in-chief and co-founder of Hyperallergic. https://hyperallergic.com Photo I: National Gallery of Art // Photo II: Chuck Close // Photo III: Thomas Roma -- Article: National Gallery of Art Indefinitely Postpones Chuck Close and Thomas Roma Shows > Following accusations of sexual misconduct against Close and Roma, the National Gallery of Art has postponed solo presentations of their works. https://hyperallergic.com/423572/national-gallery-art-postpones-chuck-close-thomas-roma/ ---------- Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > February 01, 2018 > The Thursday File #710 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com
2017 Was Really Good...for Billionaires: Report
The world is producing new billionaires at an unprecedented pace, with an average of one more being added every other day, a new Oxfam report finds.
“There are now 2,043 dollar billionaires worldwide. Nine out of 10 are men,” Oxfam says in its “Reward Work, Not Wealth” report. “In 12 months, the wealth of this elite group has increased by $762 billion. This is enough to end extreme poverty seven times over.
“In the period between 2006 and 2015, ordinary workers saw their incomes rise by an average of just 2% a year, while billionaire wealth rose by nearly 13% a year – almost six times faster.”
“Approximately a third of billionaire wealth is derived from inheritance. Over the next 20 years, 500 of the world’s richest people will hand over $2.4 trillion to their heirs – a sum larger than the GDP of India, a country of 1.3 billion people.”
Oxfam report: https://www.oxfam.org/sites/www.oxfam.org/files/file_attachments/bp-reward-work-not-wealth-220118-summ-en.pdf
-- Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > January 25, 2018 > The Thursday File #709 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Why Monk Mode Is The Secret To Insane Productivity by Drake Baer- 2 minute Read - January 18, 2018 - https://www.fastcompany.com/3021760/why-monk-mode-is-the-secret-to-insane-productivity If you have a gigantic project and a ton of people wanting your time, how do you satisfy both? By slipping into monk mode. The most productive people structure solitude into their working lives: Marie Curie experimenting deep into Parisian nights, Friedrich Nietzsche tramping around Alpine lakes, Henry Thoreau camping and contemplating in a Massachusetts forest. That was back in the day. But can you make that same headspace in our hyper-busy, hypertextual world? Business writer Greg McKeown couldn’t. He was fortunate to have a monster of a project on his hands–his first solo book–but he was kept awake at night with authorly anxiety. And quite ironically, the book was about the pursuit of less. “Being stressed out for a year while I wrote it simply was not an option,” he says on LinkedIn. But he had a hunch. If there was more time and space to really concentrate, then his levels of stress would go down–and the quality of work would go up. The proposal: monk mode. Enter: Monk Mode When you go into monk mode, you make an open declaration to yourself and everybody else that you’re going to be doing your deep work. You come out of the closet about going into your cave. “(Monk mode) means shutting out the world for a time,” McKeown says. “It is a relatively extreme approach to take, but (my wife and I) decided I would write from 5 a.m. to 1 p.m. every day. I did that for five days a week for about 9 months. I worked from a small office–tiny really–but in it I found space. And in that space I found creative freedom.” That concerted spaciousness is found in the research on creativity: the “a-ha!” moment tends to come after long, dedicated hours. It’s a process known to mathematicians, designers, writers, and painters: you need to stare down the complexity of the problem or the emptiness of the canvas for a long while for the solutions to emerge. If we’re going to be able to create things, we need to be able to focus–at length. But as McKeown says, that long-form concentration can only come from structure, from setting boundaries for the interactions you have with people. So how do you set a boundary in 2013? With an autoresponder, of course: Dear Friends, I am currently working on a new book which has put enormous burdens on my time. Unfortunately, I am unable to respond in the manner I would like. For this, I apologize. –Greg p.s. If this is a continuing conversation, please ignore and expect my response in the near future. The results? Surprisingly, McKoewn didn’t get a single negative reaction to the bounceback. And the work went smoothy: since he had a “routine that acknowledged the difficulty of the task,” he had the resources of time necessary to do the deep work of writing a book. By going into monk mode, he showed that his schedule was a tool–one that, when used gracefully, let him slay a monster of a task–one that used to keep him awake at night. Note: Drake Baer was a contributing writer at Fast Company, where he covered work culture. He's the co-author of Everything Connects, a book about how intrapersonal, interpersonal, and organizational psychology shape innovation. https://www.fastcompany.com/user/drake-baer -- The Magic of Being in Monk Mode by Greg McKeown, November 12, 2013: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/20131112182911-8353952-the-magic-of-being-in-monk-mode -- Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > January 25, 2018 > The Thursday File #709 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com
EU plans major crack down on Europe's plastics pollution By Chris Pilcher - January 17, 2018 - http://www.euronews.com/2018/01/17/e-u-plans-major-crack-down-on-europe-s-plastics-pollution The European Commission has set out a number of targets to cut plastic waste across the continent by 2030. In just over a decade, every single piece of packaging used across Europe could be reusable or recyclable. That's the new plan set out by the European Union, to cleanse the environment of plastic waste while also driving growth and innovation. It follows China's decision to ban imports of foreign recyclable material. The strategy could see far fewer everyday items such as plastic bags and bottles on our streets, a modernised approach to plastics production and heavier taxes imposed. More than £300 million is being invested in new research. Frans Timmermans (see photo III), first Vice-President of the European Commission said; "By 2030 which is only 12 years away, all plastic packages in the EU market must be reusable or recyclable in a profitable manner. We are going to turn out packaging legislation inside out and review what kind of plastic packaging can be put on the market to enable easy and cost-effective recycling". Timmermans referred to dangerous single-use plastics, such as drinking straws, “lively coloured” bottles that do not degrade, coffee cups, lids and stirrers, cutlery and takeaway packaging. Europeans generate 25 million tonnes of plastic waste every year but less than 30% is recycled. The EU wants 55% of all plastic to be recycled by 2030 and for member states to reduce the use of bags per person from 90 a year to 40 by 2026. The proposals will be reviewed over the coming months before heading to the European Parliament. -- Notes: Innovation is key for the EU's plan to work. The EU plans to invest an additional 100 million euros on top of current spending to develop more recyclable materials and more efficient recycling processes. Additionally, the EU aims to create 200,000 new jobs in the recycling industries by 2030. The Commission will also propose measures to expand collection of plastic waste, promote alternatives to single-use plastic items, such as takeaway containers, and facilitate access to public water fountains to reduce using plastic water bottles. "If we don't change the way we produce and use plastics, there will be more plastics than fish in our oceans by 2050," said vice-president of the commission Frans Timmermans. - January 16 - http://www.euronews.com/ Note: Frans Timmermans (Franciscus Cornelis Gerardus Maria "Frans" Timmermans) Born: May 06 1961 (age 56 as of 2017), Maastricht, Netherlands He is a Dutch politician and diplomat who currently serves as first Vice-President of the European Commission and the European Commissioner for the portfolio of Better Regulation, Inter-Institutional Relations, Rule of Law and Charter of Fundamental Rights in the Juncker Commission from 1 November 2014. Timmermans previously served in the Dutch Civil Service (1987–1998), as a member of the House of Representatives for the Labour Party (1998–2007; 2010–2012), as State secretary for Foreign Affairs charged with European Affairs (2007–2010) and as Minister of Foreign Affairs (2012–2014). Timmermans has married twice, having two children by his first marriage, a daughter (born 1986) and a son (born 1989). Timmermans remarried in 2000 to Irene Timmermans; he and his second wife have a son Max (born 2004) and a daughter Mare (born 2006).
Steven H MacDowall Join my Blog ‘The Thursday File’ every week. My next posting > January 25, 2018 > The Thursday File #709 - sign up today! > www.thursdayfile.com