You Are Invited!
To: Grace Hollrah Breast Cancer Support Group
Date: Monday, July 22nd 2002
Where: Bass Pavilion 401 S. 3rd Street
Time: Cafeteria Opens at 11:30 program begins at 12:00
A Very Special Program
Tammy Joy Kennedy is a Nerve Signal Interference (NSI) Specialist and
the owner of NSIR Technologies School of Alternative Healing.
We specialize in eliminating the cause of fibromyalgia, headache, back pain,
sciatica, scoliosis, asthma, vertigo, numbness and tingling of the limbs,
and possibly even paralysis and diabetes. Actually we don't know what
miracle we can perform until we try it. And yes I have seen miracles happen.
Quotes of the month
"Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that
counts can be counted."
-- Albert Einstein (1879 - 1955)
"When you do the common things in life in an uncommon way, you will
command the attention of the world."
-- George Washington Carver (1864 - 1943)
Q. Who cut the American flag into pieces and was honored for doing it?
A. Robert Peary, who left pieces of the flag scattered at the north Pole.
Q. Is it ever appropriate to fly the flag upside down?
A. Yes, but only in an emergency. It means "Help Me, I am in Trouble!"
Q. What is done with worn or outdated flags?
A. Flags are used until they are worn out and then they are destroyed,
preferably by burning.
Q. Francis Scott Key wrote the words to "The Star-Spangled Banner" on the
back of an envelope. What is the source of the music for it?
A. The music is from an old English drinking song called "To Anacreon in
Heaven."
Q. The American flag first flew over a foreign fort in what country?
A. Libya -- over Fort Derne, on the shores of Tripoli.
Q. A vexillologist is an expert in what?
A. The history of flags.
Q. "Shipwreck" Kelly (1885 - 1952) was famous for sitting for long periods
of time. What did he have to do with flags?
A. He set many flagpole-sitting records. He sat for 49 days on one flagpole.
He once estimated that he spent a total of over 20,000 hours sitting on
flagpoles. Flagpole sitting was a craze started in Baltimore, Maryland, in
1929.