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New Section
Thu Mar 03, 2011 3:16 pm by juney
Our forum Admin has made some new section under OFF-TOPIC DISCUSSIONS like below :
Education & Upgrading
Home & Family
Love & Relationship
Health, Beauty & Fashion
Career & Business
Motoring
Leisure & Entertainment
Money & Investing
Technology & Electronics
since we have new section, please kindly post on the right
[ Full reading ]
Education & Upgrading
Home & Family
Love & Relationship
Health, Beauty & Fashion
Career & Business
Motoring
Leisure & Entertainment
Money & Investing
Technology & Electronics
since we have new section, please kindly post on the right
[ Full reading ]
Comments: 1
Appeal for your Warning Level here
Sun Mar 06, 2011 2:50 pm by jackson
Warning Level has been out for some time from the start
till the end
.
Moderators and above has the authority to change your Warning Level if they find that u have violating the rules.
Here you can appeal for the warning level, if you find that we have wrongfully reduce your warning level or would like to appeal for your warning level. Kindly include the reason in your post.
till the end
. Moderators and above has the authority to change your Warning Level if they find that u have violating the rules.
Here you can appeal for the warning level, if you find that we have wrongfully reduce your warning level or would like to appeal for your warning level. Kindly include the reason in your post.
Comments: 1
Games World Forum Screensaver
Wed Mar 09, 2011 12:41 am by jackson
We have created a screensaver for all of you based on our forum to thanks for your supports.
Attach you will find the .zip file to download the screensaver for your own use.
Enjoy
Attach you will find the .zip file to download the screensaver for your own use.
Enjoy
- Attachments
Comments: 4
Games World RPG Games has started
Tue Mar 08, 2011 5:02 am by jackson
Our new Games World RPG Games has started, We have created a category mainly for the game. This game is playable in the forum. Kindly look thro the game info in Games World RPG Games section.
Comments: 1
Ranking System
Thu May 13, 2010 9:52 am by jackson
Added ranks :-
Recruit --> 1 post
Apprentice --> 15 posts
Apprentice Grade 2 --> 20 posts
Private --> 30 posts
.
.
.
.
till General Grade 4
so post weill and stay active and pls dont create double posts of the same article.
Have Fun
Recruit --> 1 post
Apprentice --> 15 posts
Apprentice Grade 2 --> 20 posts
Private --> 30 posts
.
.
.
.
till General Grade 4
so post weill and stay active and pls dont create double posts of the same article.
Have Fun
Comments: 6
In Warning/ being watch
Mon Jun 13, 2011 8:53 pm by juney
as in rules says no spam or post on wrong section. this is few people that are in warning list
1. jianghuai (Watch)
2. jucemm (WARNED)
3. xiaoshi (BANNED )
4. O1RUM(WARNED)
5. Talia (BANNED)
We (mod team) will take this cases seriously like stated in the rules.
1. jianghuai (Watch)
2. jucemm (WARNED)
3. xiaoshi (BANNED )
4. O1RUM(WARNED)
5. Talia (BANNED)
We (mod team) will take this cases seriously like stated in the rules.
Comments: 3
R9ドライバー用品の理想的な数を見
Fri Apr 27, 2012 2:44 pm by aixingzi
特定のキャロウェイディアブロボーダーゴルフアイアンは、すでに導入され、それはまたテニス、現在の市場のために最も有名な伝説だされています。いくつかの襲来は、特定のキャロウェイディアブロ給付ゴルフアイアンは、超スポーツ開発のゴルフ鉄であると確信しています。R9ドライバー…
[ Full reading ]
[ Full reading ]
Comments: 2
Global Moderators
Sat Feb 26, 2011 5:03 pm by jackson
We have added new Global Moderators. Being a Global Moderator will be able to edit and delete posts in News and Announcements section.
Congratulations to the following for being our Global moderators :-
juney
Congratulations to the following for being our Global moderators :-
juney
Comments: 5
A Good Man Is Hard To Find
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A Good Man Is Hard To Find
Life is really looking up for Claire Truman. In a New York minute, she lands a plum job at a top publishing house, catapulting her out of editorial assistant status and tripling her salary. In the same stroke of good luck, Claire goes from loser magnet to girlfriend of her decade-long crush: the fabulously successful and gorgeous Randall Cox (who's a nice guy, to boot).
The perfect guy, the perfect job ... it seems like Claire's dreams are all falling neatly into place. Enter reality. It doesn't take long before Claire realizes she's working for the publishing world's most ruthless tyrant: the outrageously abusive Vivian Grant, a woman who churns out New York Times bestsellers with nearly the same frequency as she sends traumatized assistants flying out of her office in tears. Soon Claire is in staff meetings that feel more like war zones, at a book party thrown at a strip club, and watching Vivian run her employees into the ground and into discount Tiffany jewelry therapy.
As Claire's job steals more and more of her time and soul, her relationship with Randall begins to feel the strain. It doesn't help that Claire's been spending overtime with Luke Mayville, a handsome, brilliant novelist whose career she's helping to launch. With her love life at a crossroads and her work life driving her crazy, Claire can't help wondering if her future will have a happy ending. Her career may be on the fast track, but does she like where it's taking her ... and who she might turn into?
Exactly one year before my June 26 wedding day, I was curled up on my couch with a large pepperoni pizza, a half-empty pack of Marlboro Lights, the world's most comfortable blanket, and several hours of TiVO ahead of me.
Under normal circumstances, this lineup would've thrilled me. On another night, my pack of cigarettes would have been half-full. But tonight, even the prospect of watching Kiefer Sutherland save the world for six straight hours was of little solace. For starters, I was still fresh on the heels of an ugly breakup with my wannabe rock-star boyfriend, James. (In the interest of full disclosure, it was the final of four breakups, each one more obviously Tiffany bracelet necessary than the last.) That had me down.
But what had me out was a crisis of a professional nature. Just that afternoon, I'd gotten the crushing news that Jackson Mayville, my beloved boss at Peters and Pomfret (the top-tier New York book publishing house), my professional mentor during the five years since I'd graduated from college, would be hanging up his cleats this summer. He and his wife were moving down to Virginia to be closer to their grandkids. I probably should've guessed it was coming, but I've always been pretty bad at doing that. So, when Jackson gave me the news, I immediately misted up-embarrassing but very genuine tears.
"Aw, now. Don't do that. We'll still be in touch, my dear," Jackson had consoled me in his gentle Clintonian drawl, patting my head gently and offering me his handkerchief. He pulled me into an awkward half hug, his forehead wrinkling with paternal concern.
All of which, perhaps needless to say, did nothing to dry my tears. I tried to smile and act somewhat professional, but I couldn't pull it off. I was devastated. Jackson had been much more than a boss-he'd been a father figure for me since Dad passed away five years ago. Like Dad, Jackson radiated kindness and intelligence. Both men were tall, lanky, dashing (if not precisely handsome), with a thick shock of silver hair and a tendency to rail against the Way Things Were. Both had approached their work with unwavering devotion. Both were generous, emotional, sincere. Both adored their wives.
And both men made me feel ... well, loved. Many a Friday night, Jackson would find me working late and wave me into family dinners with his wife, Carie, and their teenage sons, Michael and Edward, the youngest of their brood of five. Sitting around the table in the kitchen-warm and toasty from the oven in which Carie had almost invariably Return to Tiffany heart tag charm bracelet burned the roast or the lasagna-made me feel I'd found a real home in New York City.
"I'll be okay," I gulped, my face still muffled by Jackson's Harris Tweed blazer.
Jackson and I first met at the tail end of my senior year of college. I'd stepped nervously into his office, crisp résumé in hand, and perched on the same worn leather couch that I'd cried on this afternoon. Graduation loomed just weeks away. I'd been able to nab a job offer from another big publisher-the result of many trips to New York City in Bea's beat-up station wagon-but when I managed to get a meeting with the legendary Jackson Mayville, I told the HR representative at the other company that I needed more time to consider my options. After all, it was Jackson Mayville. He'd edited some of the century's most important literary voices and was truly in a league of his own.
I'd known since girlhood that I wanted to be a book editor. By high school, I'd pore over the acknowledgments section of novels I loved, daydreaming that someday a brilliant talent might see me as the person who "made her book possible" or "enhanced every page with editorial wisdom and insight." Could I be the Maxwell Perkins to some future Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Wolfe? Learning the ropes from Jackson Mayville seemed like a great Tiffany jewelry first step.
And, as it turned out, it had been. Five years with Jackson had flown by, and I'd learned more from him than I'd ever imagined I would. Sure, it hadn't always been a bed of roses-professionally or personally. It'd been five years of struggling to make ends meet, weathering one failed relationship after another, watching friends settle into domestic bliss while I was still heating up Campbell's soup for one most nights of the week. But it'd also been five years of learning the ropes from a talented and generous mentor, kicking up my heels, savoring my independence. So it all evened out.
The perfect guy, the perfect job ... it seems like Claire's dreams are all falling neatly into place. Enter reality. It doesn't take long before Claire realizes she's working for the publishing world's most ruthless tyrant: the outrageously abusive Vivian Grant, a woman who churns out New York Times bestsellers with nearly the same frequency as she sends traumatized assistants flying out of her office in tears. Soon Claire is in staff meetings that feel more like war zones, at a book party thrown at a strip club, and watching Vivian run her employees into the ground and into discount Tiffany jewelry therapy.
As Claire's job steals more and more of her time and soul, her relationship with Randall begins to feel the strain. It doesn't help that Claire's been spending overtime with Luke Mayville, a handsome, brilliant novelist whose career she's helping to launch. With her love life at a crossroads and her work life driving her crazy, Claire can't help wondering if her future will have a happy ending. Her career may be on the fast track, but does she like where it's taking her ... and who she might turn into?
Exactly one year before my June 26 wedding day, I was curled up on my couch with a large pepperoni pizza, a half-empty pack of Marlboro Lights, the world's most comfortable blanket, and several hours of TiVO ahead of me.
Under normal circumstances, this lineup would've thrilled me. On another night, my pack of cigarettes would have been half-full. But tonight, even the prospect of watching Kiefer Sutherland save the world for six straight hours was of little solace. For starters, I was still fresh on the heels of an ugly breakup with my wannabe rock-star boyfriend, James. (In the interest of full disclosure, it was the final of four breakups, each one more obviously Tiffany bracelet necessary than the last.) That had me down.
But what had me out was a crisis of a professional nature. Just that afternoon, I'd gotten the crushing news that Jackson Mayville, my beloved boss at Peters and Pomfret (the top-tier New York book publishing house), my professional mentor during the five years since I'd graduated from college, would be hanging up his cleats this summer. He and his wife were moving down to Virginia to be closer to their grandkids. I probably should've guessed it was coming, but I've always been pretty bad at doing that. So, when Jackson gave me the news, I immediately misted up-embarrassing but very genuine tears.
"Aw, now. Don't do that. We'll still be in touch, my dear," Jackson had consoled me in his gentle Clintonian drawl, patting my head gently and offering me his handkerchief. He pulled me into an awkward half hug, his forehead wrinkling with paternal concern.
All of which, perhaps needless to say, did nothing to dry my tears. I tried to smile and act somewhat professional, but I couldn't pull it off. I was devastated. Jackson had been much more than a boss-he'd been a father figure for me since Dad passed away five years ago. Like Dad, Jackson radiated kindness and intelligence. Both men were tall, lanky, dashing (if not precisely handsome), with a thick shock of silver hair and a tendency to rail against the Way Things Were. Both had approached their work with unwavering devotion. Both were generous, emotional, sincere. Both adored their wives.
And both men made me feel ... well, loved. Many a Friday night, Jackson would find me working late and wave me into family dinners with his wife, Carie, and their teenage sons, Michael and Edward, the youngest of their brood of five. Sitting around the table in the kitchen-warm and toasty from the oven in which Carie had almost invariably Return to Tiffany heart tag charm bracelet burned the roast or the lasagna-made me feel I'd found a real home in New York City.
"I'll be okay," I gulped, my face still muffled by Jackson's Harris Tweed blazer.
Jackson and I first met at the tail end of my senior year of college. I'd stepped nervously into his office, crisp résumé in hand, and perched on the same worn leather couch that I'd cried on this afternoon. Graduation loomed just weeks away. I'd been able to nab a job offer from another big publisher-the result of many trips to New York City in Bea's beat-up station wagon-but when I managed to get a meeting with the legendary Jackson Mayville, I told the HR representative at the other company that I needed more time to consider my options. After all, it was Jackson Mayville. He'd edited some of the century's most important literary voices and was truly in a league of his own.
I'd known since girlhood that I wanted to be a book editor. By high school, I'd pore over the acknowledgments section of novels I loved, daydreaming that someday a brilliant talent might see me as the person who "made her book possible" or "enhanced every page with editorial wisdom and insight." Could I be the Maxwell Perkins to some future Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Wolfe? Learning the ropes from Jackson Mayville seemed like a great Tiffany jewelry first step.
And, as it turned out, it had been. Five years with Jackson had flown by, and I'd learned more from him than I'd ever imagined I would. Sure, it hadn't always been a bed of roses-professionally or personally. It'd been five years of struggling to make ends meet, weathering one failed relationship after another, watching friends settle into domestic bliss while I was still heating up Campbell's soup for one most nights of the week. But it'd also been five years of learning the ropes from a talented and generous mentor, kicking up my heels, savoring my independence. So it all evened out.
daphne- Recruit

- Warning Level:

Posts: 9
Join date: 2010-05-05
Re: A Good Man Is Hard To Find
I move your post to the Miscellaneous section. Please post in the correct categories.
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Re: A Good Man Is Hard To Find
good men never easy to find...
but bad men to easy to find...
but bad men to easy to find...
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