Abe Lincoln was the first President to bring a cat into the White House: When son Tad asked to bring his cat Tabby, Lincoln agreed. Later, on a visit to General Grant's headquarters in the middle of winter, Lincoln found three half-frozen kittens there and took them back to the White House. Rutherford B. Hayes had the first Siamese cat to be brought into the US, which was a gift from the American Consulate in Bangkok. The cat's name was Miss box...
Good job standuley....
Let's do another one
COVERS allows you to tell others they r sexually confused so long as your hands are clean
Abe Lincoln was the first President to bring a cat into the White House: When son Tad asked to bring his cat Tabby, Lincoln agreed. Later, on a visit to General Grant's headquarters in the middle of winter, Lincoln found three half-frozen kittens there and took them back to the White House. Rutherford B. Hayes had the first Siamese cat to be brought into the US, which was a gift from the American Consulate in Bangkok. The cat's name was Miss box...
Abe Lincoln was the first President to bring a cat into the White House: When son Tad asked to bring his cat Tabby, Lincoln agreed. Later, on a visit to General Grant's headquarters in the middle of winter, Lincoln found three half-frozen kittens there and took them back to the White House. Rutherford B. Hayes had the first Siamese cat to be brought into the US, which was a gift from the American Consulate in Bangkok. The cat's name was Miss box...
Abe Lincoln was the first President to bring a cat into the White House: When son Tad asked to bring his cat Tabby, Lincoln agreed. Later, on a visit to General Grant's headquarters in the middle of winter, Lincoln found three half-frozen kittens there and took them back to the White House. Rutherford B. Hayes had the first Siamese cat to be brought into the US, which was a gift from the American Consulate in Bangkok. The cat's name was Miss box...
A recent study of high schoolers revealed that daylight savings time might mess with kids college admissions. For decades, scientists have debated whether spring and fall time changes affect everything from seasonal affective disorder to traffic accidents. The idea is that resetting clocks by "springing forward" and "falling back" can upset sleep patterns and with them the ability to concentrate.
Now, it appears that these time changes might just muck up performance on the SAT, the U.S. college admissions exam, which is administered five times a year, including two dates that fall after daylight savings transitions. Using data from Indiana, where until recently individual counties could opt in or out of daylight savings, researchers found that scores in counties that changed their clocks were consistently 16.34 points—or 2%—lower than in counties that did not, according to the Journal of Neuroscience, Psychology, and Economics. It doesn't sound like a lot, but it may be enough to keep a kid out of a reputable college.
Good job Henry-Lilly....
Let's do one more
COVERS allows you to tell others they r sexually confused so long as your hands are clean
A recent study of high schoolers revealed that daylight savings time might mess with kids college admissions. For decades, scientists have debated whether spring and fall time changes affect everything from seasonal affective disorder to traffic accidents. The idea is that resetting clocks by "springing forward" and "falling back" can upset sleep patterns and with them the ability to concentrate.
Now, it appears that these time changes might just muck up performance on the SAT, the U.S. college admissions exam, which is administered five times a year, including two dates that fall after daylight savings transitions. Using data from Indiana, where until recently individual counties could opt in or out of daylight savings, researchers found that scores in counties that changed their clocks were consistently 16.34 points—or 2%—lower than in counties that did not, according to the Journal of Neuroscience, Psychology, and Economics. It doesn't sound like a lot, but it may be enough to keep a kid out of a reputable college.
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