Top men ” who” Top men

Another example of Top men

Down the road over that way (waves the hand), by the Calumet (no, not the pipe, what’s wrong with you). There is boulder when pouring water over it, a ship with sail can be clearly seen. A couple of possible taken to Kensington Minnesota.

if stuff doesn’t fit into neat little boxes provided by the “Top men”, it’s hidden, ridiculed, discarded or ignored completely. The Smithsonian Institution could be viewed as the nation’s attic with ” Top men” running the joint. If you want to do an exercise in fertility, email them asking, what have you done with all the giant bones found throughout the land?

if you don’t get a reply don’t be bummed, after-all you are not viewed as “Top men” if they do reply with ” we put them all on a barge and dumped them in the ocean because they didn’t fit into the box. Well at least you got an answer.

Just think, with other ” Top men” from another department decides to flip the kill switch for the internet, all those people who never unfolded a map only to crumble it up an stuff back into the glove box, or cannot read a compass, or even could use a sun dial, those people will resemble this turtle.

History books taught that Christopher Columbus discovered America. A special day was even named in his honor, and it has been celebrated as a federal holiday since 1937. However, in 1957, a new discovery surfaced that would turn the belief of Columbus discovering America on its head. A Spanish-based Italian dealer named Enzo Ferrajoli was trying to sell an old map called the Vinland map.

The Vinland Map was found bound along with a medieval text called the “Hystoria Tartarorum” or “Tartar Relation.” Scholars proved this text to be an authentic work dating to 1440. The Tartar Relation describes the history and manners of the Mongols and was prepared by a Franciscan scholar, Giovanni De Pian Del Carpini.

The map has been in Yale University’s possession since the early 1960s. Initially, Yale authorities did not weigh in on the genuineness of the map. They stated simply that they regard themselves “as the custodians of an extremely interesting and controversial document . . . and we watch the scholarly work on it with great interest.” However, in 2011, Yale’s professor of history, Paul Freedman, said that the Vinland map is “unfortunately a fake” (Open Yale Courses).

if a Thunder bird swooped down and grabbed paul

delivered him Nanna Bijou, I’d be ok with that