Now Wednesday Night at MSG is HUGE!!! 🏀🏀🏀
That was a Big Bounce Back road win for Spurs.
- If Knicks win Wednesday, they're still in great shape to be NBA Champs.
- If Knicks lose Wednesday, this series is WIDE OPEN.
@kelly_rdc I am not sure, but my favorite vintager is my 1968 Fender Palomino. Lovely old girl, and sounds as sweet as you please.
(Not my pic, but same guitar. :))
Learn more about the renovated West 229th Street Step Street, which connects Heath Avenue at its lowest point to Kingsbridge Terrace at its highest in the hilly terrain of the western Bronx.https://t.co/zk2UJaknYe
@miradasurfs Great looking Squier👍. About to upgrade an older Stagemaster with a pair of Texas Specials and a mystery Gibson humbucker, locking tuners, etc.
The rot of narcissism has destroyed the very concept of duty in our society. Duty means doing what is required because it is required, whether or not it benefits you, excites you, rewards you, or makes you look good.
Modern people hate duty because duty is indifferent to their feelings. The clearest evidence of this rot is the collapse of the birth rate. A society that worships the self will stop having children because children require things like selfless sacrifice and duty.
A father must provide whether he feels inspired or not and a mother must nurture whether she is praised or not.
Duty is the death of childishness, but unfortunately we live during a time of endless adolescence when we desperately need adults.
KAT owns New York. On the court. In the Finals. And now in your bodega.🗽🏀
As a Good Eat'n investor, @karltowns is bringing real flavor to the city that runs on corner store runs. Good Eat'n is officially in your local bodegas. Go find it!
And If you're in Manhattan, KAT's billboard is up now at 213 W. 30th Street. You already know what to do.
#BodegaKat #GoodEatn #NYC #KnicksNation
U.S. Marines are shown receiving Holy Communion on Iwo Jima on March 3, 1945.
This historic photograph, taken by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal on March 3, 1945, depicts three U.S. Marines kneeling on the volcanic sands of Iwo Jima as they receive Communion from a chaplain.
The men identified in the image are Private First Class Edmond L. Fadel, Private Walter M. Sokowski, and Private Nicholas A. Zingaro, taking part in a Catholic Mass conducted during the fierce fighting near Motoyama Airfield. The image endures as a striking symbol of faith and humanity amid one of the bloodiest island battles of World War II.