January 23, 2007

Constipated

Every day, 65 unfinished draft posts taunt me from their digital castle. "Thpppppt! Thppt! Thppt!"

Also, I'm renaming, redesigning & moving the blog soon. "Fiends! I'll tear them apart!" Probably to here.

"Right! Charge!"

...

...

...

"Run away!"

...

"Oh, haw haw haw haw! Haw! Haw haw heh..."

Posted by Noel at 12:54 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

December 02, 2006

Take Your Money and Run

Good news everyone. I soon spring into part-time graduate studies of computer science at Washington University in St. Louis.

You may recognize the name; my wife attends the same institution of higher learning. A complete coincidence. Contemporary art historians have no influence in matters of science. WashU was just the closest train stop.

I've enjoyed the last two and a half years of earning money, reading whatever the heck I want, not taking tests, puttering around in the evenings, and in general flaunting the non-academic life. At least I get to keep the money.

Posted by Noel at 09:19 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

November 23, 2006

This Is Not About Thanksgiving

"Turtle blood has amazing healing powers. Mix with white wine when you are recovering."

--Lunch guest today

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September 29, 2006

Can't Stop This [Updated]

For the first eighteen years of my life that I was responsible for my bathing, it was done in the morning, every morning. Forced to awaken before dawn, hours not deigned by God or the sun but certainly by the demands of my strict education, I warmed up to the day with running water. Then came college, and the subsequent experimentation with bohemian habits of cleanliness. The summer I lifeguarded, I would go weeks without a specific scrubbing.

Now, though, a day after my quadcentennial, I must find myself anew amidst the spray. Time, timeliness, timelessness, all aspects of a shower, require a short periodicty. But the phase must be shifted, as befits my new-found cellular maturity. I, Noel Weichbrodt, have resolved to bath once a day, in the evening.

The best song on the new Root's album is the last one.

[Link fixed] Can't Stop This.

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September 13, 2006

Sumo!

Not much reaches the visceral power of two awesomely large, trained, muscled men repeatedly hitting each other in a choreographed, unscripted dance of light violence.
Sumo!
You should have been there. They certainly were.

Posted by Noel at 10:31 PM | Comments (2) | TrackBack

September 04, 2006

What Are You Doing?

Elissa and I are frustrated writers at the moment. There's stories, thoughts, experiences, and hackles raised up from our fresh uprooting to STL. But they all require framing, more framing than we're able to articulate right now.

I'm resorting to a dialogue. You may call my interlocutor 'Reader', or whatever else you fancy.

"What are you doing at work?"

A question with an answer more convoluted than I wish, dear Reader, though by necessity. Broadly speaking, I'm writing software for intelligence agencies. Technically speaking, I'm writing a new enterprise-level intranet application in ASP.NET and C#. Basically the same work as before, with the C# being a slight Java-like twist on my previous language of VB.NET. The kicker for me is that at this new place, being a large defense contractor with dozens of sites at CMMI level 5, there's a lot of meaty metrics and process optimizations that give my work interesting structure. The requirements often arouse intellectual engagement too. Being a large corporation where my product actually makes the company money (instead of helping the company to run its business better, like my last job), they take care of administrative and configuration work so that I can do what I love: write computer code that makes software.

Posted by Noel at 11:10 PM | Comments (2) | TrackBack

August 31, 2006

First In Last Out

37 draft posts lay silent, unloved by a digital touch. Sorry for the silence. As always, I continue practicing the easy discipline of writing, but not the hard habit of posting.

I'm still developing stories and the narrative for living in our new city, so I've been writing really technical drafts for the last weeks. But my displacement pinched my editing skills, so none have seen the light of day.

St. Louis, the Mound City.

Posted by Noel at 11:34 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

August 17, 2006

Back

Oh yeah, we're rocking the in-home internet connection like it's 1994. Thanks, Charter. Hopefully I won't have to start a new category for you.

Posted by Noel at 09:21 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack

August 08, 2006

Aimless Times

My apocalyptic tenor will not be silenced. But bear with me for a moment as I establish myself. Most immediately, the formerly omnipresent internet placenta has been temporarily severed, and will not be reconnected for another week. Additionally, I must figure out how to discuss my work without breaking federal law. Also, I had a bad case of the hiccups at night. "Hic......hic......hic......hic......huckgh......hic......hic......huckgh......"
To tantalize, here's what I recently submitted to the office newsletter:

Born in Colorado, grown in Oklahoma, proud ex-Texan, and sometimes-proud alumni of Covenant College (B.A. Philosophy, B.A. Information & Computer Science; 2004). My wife, Elissa, and I met on Lookout Mountain, Georgia while at college and were married in the winter of 2004 in her hometown of Honolulu, Hawaii. We just moved to Saint Louis from Chattanooga, Tennessee where I was writing software for the AMLaw 250 law firm Miller & Martin and she was a adjunct professor of English at our alma mater. I have joined the OGS project for TASC STL, and she attends the graduate school at Washington University in the Art History program. We have a 100 year old house in University City, a cat that we compare to Marie Antoinette, a list of restaurants to check out in Saint Louis, and an ever-expanding library of books. I enjoy spending time with my five siblings scattered across from both coasts through the Midwest, listening to live jazz, and practicing soccer tricks copied from Ronaldinho.

Also, there appears to be a commissioned corporate inspirational song and video.

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July 21, 2006

Westward Ho!

I stop writing computer programs for lawyers tomorrow. I begin writing computer programs for intelligence agencies on Monday. I'll leave the protective shadow of Lookout Mountain, bulwark against the storms from the West, and mush just that way, back to the flatlands and anvil thunderheads. New places and people beckon, and frankly, having failed to take radical action, I've disconnected already from the people and places here in the 'nooga. Natural, not entirely good, and completely inevitable.

The mountains have been hazy the last week. Today I walked south from downtown to southside, and I could only make out the faintest looming mountain line in the sky two miles away. I picked up my car, clad in new klomppen so freash and so clean clean, and drove away.

My playlist for driving to and fro is as follows:

  1. Johnny Cash in Tennessee
    1. Live at Fulsom Prison
    2. Johnny Cash & Bob Dylan
    3. American Recordings
    4. American III
    5. American IV

  2. My Morning Jacket in Kentucky
    1. It Still Moves
    2. Z

  3. Sufjan Stevens in Illinoise
    1. Illinoise
    2. Avalanche
    3. Seven Swans
    4. Live at the Purple Door 12/20/2005

  4. Nelly in Missouri
    1. various singles of irreputable provenance and nature

    Obviously, two questions follow from this. First, does anyone know of high-quality MMJ live sets from the Z tour? Second, can a suitable replacement be found for Nelly repping Missouri?

    This move is also messing with my personal metanarrative. But I'll touch on that later.

    Posted by Noel at 12:10 AM | Comments (1) | TrackBack

    July 06, 2006

    Summer Solstice

    ...was good for Weichbrodts, bad for the Yanks, and sad for Chattanooga. Westward ho.

    On the longest day of the year, I verbally accepted a job offer, we put a contract on a house in University City, and the US Men's National Team lost to Ghana 2-1. It'll be nice to return to the Midwest.

    The World Cup isn't the only cat that has caught my tongue over the last month.

    We're leaving this town, sadly. Excitingly, I've accepted a Junior Programmer position in the IT Intelligence group of a large defense company, and Elissa has been accepted into the doctoral-track graduate program at Washington Univerrsity in St. Louis.

    Obviously this wil change...things. Stay tuned.

    Posted by Noel at 05:46 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack

    June 08, 2006

    Yellow Card for Wasting Time

    This doesn't really count as a post. Blame it on the World Cup. I have substantial content to reveal to the world, but all my time is being sucked into the bladders of 16 inflatable balls as those 32 teams play each other. "I'm watching the World Cup" doesn't count as an excuse for not blogging, mostly because I can't watch something that hasn't begun (TiVo, if you solve that problem, I will personally beat a trail to your door). But hey, watching requires preperation, and those tatical guides for each group and team don't read themselves.

    Posted by Noel at 05:39 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

    May 31, 2006

    The Man Date

    When Macey was back in Chattanooga a couple of weeks months ago, we reclaimed some quality time together we both had missed. One moment, a precious hour, of that was lunch. We went to a downtown Thai restaurant. We both had Thai iced tea and something spicy. We talked. It was a man date. I did the same type thing with my younger bro over Christmas.

    If you don't know, now you know. I'm just that secure.

    Posted by Noel at 05:37 PM | Comments (3) | TrackBack

    May 16, 2006

    Lame Excuses

    I was going to post a lame excuse for my recent posts, all of which contain less than two sentences and/or a single picture.

    This is not it.

    Posted by Noel at 05:31 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

    April 06, 2006

    Out to Lunch: Back on Monday

    Posted by Noel at 11:30 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

    March 27, 2006

    Attention Chattanooga:

    The man recently praised by Robert Pinsky as showing "ambition and scope", R. David Macey, will return to our fair town in a mere matter of hours. Mothers, hide your comely daughters, lest his aforementioned scope extend to them. Everyone else, meet at the Fox & the Hound, which has yet again agreed to offer $2.00 pints for the evening in his honor.

    Mr. Macey will be taking visitors beginning at four in the afternoon.

    For those so inclined, I will arrive there at six in the evening to catch the rebroadcast of the day's Champion's League fixture 'twixt my beloved Barcelona and Benefica with him.

    That is all.

    Posted by Noel at 10:33 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

    February 12, 2006

    The Importance of Bourbon in These Uncertain, Modern Times

    Mesh and I recently discussed the wonders and glories, the ineffable qualities that make themselves sparklingly apparent, the virtues that delight and enjoy the reader of the Walker Percy essay on drinking bourbon.

    The world is a broken place. Words like his are important to hear and follow in these uncertain, modern times. The consumption of bourbon has become integral in thinking, discussing, and responding to current world events, whether you do so alone or with the companionship of others.

    Last night was another miserable experience with scotch, and caused me to long for the bracing, wholesome embrace of a few fingers of Kentucky's finest. Percy converted me to bourbon with this essay, and damn if I cannot testify that it all isn't true.

    It appears that the University of North Carolina holds the original manuscript, which would be a treat to examine. I'm keeping a copy of the entire essay in the extended entry so that it doesn't slip away from me again.

    This is not written by a connoisseur of Bourbon. Ninety-nine percent of Bourbon drinkers know more about Bourbon than I do. It is about the aesthetic of Bourbon drinking in general and in particular of knocking it back neat.

    I can hardly tell one Bourbon from another, unless the other is very bad.
    Some bad Boubons are even more memorable than good ones. For example, I
    can recall being broke with some friends in Tennessee and deciding to have
    a party and being able to afford only two-fifths of a $1.75 Bourbon called
    Two Natural, whose label showed dice coming up 5 and 2. Its taste was
    memorable. The psychological effect was also notable. After knocking back
    two or three shots over a period of half an hour, the three male drinkers
    looked at each other and said in a single voice: 'Where are the women?'
    I have not been able to locate this remarkable Bourbon since.

    Not only should connoisseurs of Bourbon not read this article, neither
    should persons preoccupied with the perils of alcoholism, cirrhosis,
    esophageal hemorrhage, cancer of the palate, and so forth--all real dangers.
    I, too, deplore these afflications. But, as between these evils and the
    aesthetic of Bourbon drinking, that is, the use of Bourbon to warm the
    heart, to reduce the anomie of the late twentieth century, to cut the cold
    phlegm of Wednesday afternoons, I choose the aesthetic. What, after all,
    is the use of not having cancer, cirrhosis, and such, if a man comes home
    from work every day at five-thirty to the exurbs of Montclair or Memphis
    and there is the grass growing and the little family looking not quite at
    him but just past the side of his head, and there's Cronkite on the tube
    and the smell of pot roast in the living room, and inside the house and
    outside in the pretty exurb has settled the noxious particles and the
    sadn ess of the old dying Western world, and him thinking: 'Jesus, is this
    it? Listening to Cronkite and the grass growing?'

    If I should appear to be suggesting that such a man proceed as quickly as
    possible to anesthetize his cerebral cortex by ingesting ethyl alcohol,
    the point is being missed. Or part of the point. The joy of Bourbon
    drinking is not the pharmacological effect of C(2)H(5)OH on the cortex but
    rather the instant of the whiskey being knocked back and the little
    explosion of Kentucky U.S.A. sunshine in the cavity of the nasopharynx and
    the hot bosky bite of Tennessee summertime--aesthetic considerations to
    which the effect of the alcohol is, if not dispensable, at least secondary.

    By contrast, Scotch: for me (not, I presume, for a Scot), drinking Scotch
    is like looking at a picture of Noel Coward. The whiskey assaults the
    nasopharynx with all the excitement of paregoric. Scotch drinkers (not
    all, of course) I think of as upward-mobile Americans, Houston and New
    Orleans businessmen who graduate from Bourbon about the same time they shed
    seersuckers for Lilly slacks. Of course, by now these same folk may have
    gone back to Bourbon and seersucker for the same reason, because too many
    Houston oilmen drink Scotch.

    Nothing, therefore, will be said about the fine points of sour mash,
    straights, blends, bonded, except a general preference for the lower proofs.
    It is a matter of the arithmetic of aesthetics. If one derives the same
    pleasure from knocking back 80-proof Bourbon as 100-proof, the formula is
    both as simple as 2 + 2 = 4 and as incredible as non-Euclidean geometry.
    Consider. One knocks back five one-ounce shots of 80-proof Early Times or
    four shots of 100-proof Old Fitzgerald. The alcohol ingestion is the same:

    5 X 40% = 2
    4 X 50% = 2

    Yet, in the case of the Early Times, one has obtained an extra quantum of
    joy without cost to liver, brain, or gastric mucosa. A bonus, pure and
    simple, an aesthetic gain as incredible as two parallel lines meeting at
    infinity.

    An apology to the reader is in order, nevertheless, for it has just occurred
    to me that this is the most unedifying and even maleficent piece I ever
    wrote--if it should encourage potential alcoholics to start knocking back
    Bourbon neat. It is also the unfairest. Because I am, happily and
    unhappily, endowed with a bad GI tract, diverticulosis, neurotic colon,
    and a mild recurring nausea, which make it less likely for me to become an
    alcoholic than my healthier fellow Americans. I can hear the reader now:
    Who is he kidding? If this joker has to knock back five shots of Bourbon
    every afternoon just to stand the twentieth century, he's already an
    alcoholic. Very well. I submit to this or any semantic. All I am saying
    is that if I drink much more than this I will get sick as a dog for two
    days and the very sight and smell of whiskey will bring on the heaves.

    Readers beware, therefore, save only those who have stronger wills or as
    bad a gut as I.

    The pleasure of knocking back Bourbon lies in the plain of the aesthetic
    but at an opposite pole from connoisseurship. My preference for the
    former is or is not deplorable depending on one's value system --
    that is to say, how one balances out the Epicurean virtues of
    cultivating one's sensory end organs with the greatest discrimination and
    at least cost to one's health, against the virtue of evocation of time and
    memory and of the recovery of self and the past from the fogged-in
    disoriented Western world. In Kierkegaardian terms, the use of Bourbon to
    such an end is a kind of aestheticized religious mode of existence, whereas
    connoisseurship, the discriminating but single-minded stimulation of sensory
    end organs, is the aesthetic of damnation.

    Two exemplars of the two aesthetics come to mind.

    Imagine Clifton Webb, scarf at throat, sitting at Cap d'Antibes on a perfect
    day, the little wavelets of the Mediterranean sparkling in the sunlight,
    and he is savoring a 1959 Mouton Rothschild.

    Then imagine William Faulkner, having finished 'Absalom, Absalom!',
    drained, written out, pissed-off, feeling himself over the edge and out of
    it,
    nowhere, but he goes somewhere, his favorite hunting place in the Delta
    wilderness of the Big Sunflower River and, still feeling bad with his
    hunting cronies and maybe even a little phony, which he was, what with him
    trying to pretend he was one of them, a farmer, hunkered down in the cold
    and rain after the hunt, after honorably passing up the does and seeing no
    bucks, shivering and snot-nosed, takes out a flat pint of any Bourbon at
    all and flatfoots about a third of it. He shivers again but not from the
    cold.

    Bourbon does for me what the piece of cake did for Proust.

    1926: As a child watching my father in Birmingham, in the exurbs, living
    next to a number-6 fairway of the New Country Club, him disdaining both
    the bathtub gin and white lightening of the time, aging his own Bourbon in
    a charcoal keg, on his hands and knees in the basement sucking on the
    siphon, a matter of gravity requiring cheek pressed against the concrete
    floor, the siphon getting going, the decanter ready, the first hot spurt
    into his mouth not spat out.

    1933: My uncle's sun parlour in the Mississippi Delta and toddies on a
    Sunday afternoon, the prolonged and meditative tinkle of silver spoon
    against crystal to dissolve the sugar; talk, tinkle, talk; the talk mostly
    political: "Roosevelt is doing a good job; no, the son of a bitch is
    betraying his class."

    1934: Drinking at a Delta dance, the boys in bi-swing jackets and tab
    collars, tough-talking and profane and also scared of the girls and
    therefore safe in the men's room. Somebody passes around bootleg Bourbon
    in a Coke bottle. It's awful. Tears start from eyes, faces turn red.
    'Hot damn, that's good!'

    1935: Drinking at a football game in college. UNC versus Duke. One has a
    blind date. One is lucky. She is beautiful. Her clothes are the color of
    the fall leaves and her face turns up like a flower. But what to SAY to
    her, let alone what to do, and whether she is 'nice' or 'hot' -- a
    distinction made in those days. But what to SAY? Take a drink, by now
    from a proper concave hip flask (a long way from the Delta Coke bottle)
    with a hinged top. Will she have a drink? No. But that's all right. The
    taste of the Bourbon (Cream of Kentucky) and the smell of her fuse with
    the brilliant Carolina fall and the sounds of the crowd and the hit of the
    linesmen in a single synesthesia.

    1941: Drinking mint juleps, famed Southern Bourbon drink, though in the
    Deep South not really drunk much. In fact, they are drunk so seldom that
    when, say, on Derby Day somebody gives a julep party, people drink them
    like cocktails, forgetting that a good julep holds at least five ounces of
    Bourbon. Men fall face-down unconscious, women wander in the woods
    disconsolate and amnesiac, full of thoughts of Kahil Gibran and the
    limberlost.

    Would you believe the first mind julep I had I was sitting not on a columned
    porth but in the Boo Snooker bar of the New Yorker Hotel with a Bellevue
    nurse in 1941? The nurse, a nice upstate girl, head floor nurse, brisk,
    swift, good-looking; Bellevue nurses, the best in the world and this one
    the best of Bellevue, at least the best-looking. The julep, an atrocity,
    a heavy syrupy Bourbon and water in a small glass clotted with ice. But
    good!

    How could two women be more different than the beautiful languid Carolina
    girl and this swift handsome girl from Utica, best Dutch stock? One thing
    was sure. Each has to be courted, loved, drunk with, with Bourbon. I
    should have stuck with the Bourbon. We changed to gin fizzes because the
    bartender said he came from New Orleans and could make good ones. He could
    and did.

    They were delicious. What I didn't know was that they were made with raw
    egg albumen and I was allergic to it. What a lovely fine strapping smart
    girl!

    And thinking of being invited into her apartment where she lived alone and
    of her offering to cook a little supper and of the many kisses and the
    sweet love that already existed between us and was bound to grow apace,
    when on the Brooklyn Bridge itself my upper lip began to swell and little
    sparks of light flew past the corner of my eye like St. Elmo's fire. In
    the space of thirty seconds my lip stuck out a full three-quarter inch,
    like a shelf, like Mortimer Snerd. Not only was kissing out of the question
    but my eyes swelled shut. I made it across the bridge, pulled over to the
    curb, and fainted. Whereupon this noble nurse drove me back to Bellevue,
    game me a shot, and put me to bed.

    Anybody who monkeys around with gin and egg white deserves what he gets.
    I should have stuck with Bourbon and have from that day to this.

    POSTSCRIPT: Reader, just in case you don't want to knock it back straight
    and would rather monkey around with perfectly good Bourbon, here's my
    favorite recipe, "Cud'n Walker's Uncle Will's Favorite Mint Julep Receipt."

    You need excellent Bourbon whiskey; rye or Scotch will not do. Put half
    an inch of sugar in the bottom of the glass and merely dampen it with water.
    Next, very quickly--and here is the trick in the procedure -- crush your
    ice, actually powder it, preferably with a wooden mallet, so quickly that
    it remains dry, and, slipping two sprigs of fresh mint against the inside
    of the glass, cram the ice in right to the brim, packing it with your hand.
    Finally, fill the glass, which apparently has no room left for anything
    else, with Bourbon, the older the better, and grate a bit of nutmeg on the
    top. The glass will frost immediately. Then settle back in your chair
    for half an hour of cumulative bliss.


    --Walker Pearcy, "Bourbon", from Signposts in a Strange Land, 1975

    Posted by Noel at 05:33 PM | Comments (3) | TrackBack

    February 01, 2006

    Sooner Gain, Gamecock Lost

    Win some and lose some. This week I said Godspeed to a dear friend of many years, Jason Luther. He's moving to Florida to pursue ludicrous amounts of insurance money his dream of running his own business. Meyer's Pride, a roofing contractor in partnership with our old roommate Brien Meyer, gains his singular work ethic and intelligence. Brien gets his old roommate back, and Chattanooga loses one more of my valued friends that I have gained since moving here. Jason, though I rocked your world in Greco-Roman, you've been a greater influence, resource, and brother than your wrestling performance suggested.

    I mentioned that you win some. If you've ever been foiled by Murray Logic, curious about the Gamecocks, or craving some young conservative opinion-shaping, you would do well to subscribe, as I already have, to Manville Tabletalk, Jason's new blog. Though I'll miss him as a drinking buddy, at least I'll still get the quips and absurd videos.

    Posted by Noel at 05:35 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack

    January 10, 2006

    Think Small. Think Sexy Beast.

    When confronting massive problems like African poverty, try this debonair gentlemen on for size.

    My friend Peter Brinkerhoff (he of S.B. infamy) is back in America for a small break after a year in the (neither) Democratic (nor) Republic of Congo. He's doing important work on a small scale, work that won't win him Fulbright Fellowships or Time magazine covers, but will help lift ~1,000 Congolese from cyclical poverty to thriving entrepreneurship. Joel Belz describes the work of his fellow Ashvillian in glowing terms in a post to World Magazine.

    I'm working on getting Peter set up with a blog. More to follow. Props to Jason for proposing the title and lead of this post.

    Posted by Noel at 05:36 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack

    December 07, 2005

    Can I Live Better Than This Guy?

    Frederik “Frits” Phillips ran the Dutch electronics company Phillips for a decade, watched his hometown team from the bleachers for 93 years, practiced charity and humility because he loved God, and saved over 300 Jews from Auschwitz during WWII. He died on Monday, December 5, at one hundred years of age.

    And he's Dutch, which for some of my friends means I didn't even need to write the preceding laudatory paragraph.

    Posted by Noel at 05:06 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack

    November 15, 2005

    Important Weichbrodt Tuples

    Mr. (690, 730) & Mrs. (730, 770)

    Posted by Noel at 07:08 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack

    November 04, 2005

    Hair Stories IV

    I take my lunch to the park across the street, the award-winning and humanely-designed Miller Plaza, a few times a week. One Wednesday, I was meeting my wife for a nice break. Our mouths were full of food as we looked into each other's eyes lovingly. Two old ladies got up a couple of tables over, chattering loudly. I paid no mind, until one of them said something indistinct rather loudly. I looked up, and she was looking at me. I had no idea if she was talking to me, and locked eyes with her and did some sort of goofy pantomime to indicate such, since verbal communication was failing. Lady 2 intervened, "What she is telling you is that you have gorgeous hair." Lady 1 quickly followed, "Have people told you that before?" I replied in the affirmative, and broadly indicated the large population of such. Lady 1, undeterred, continued, "Well, we saw you and thought 'he has such beautiful hair', and we were so jealous. That's what every woman wants."

    Thanks, ladies. I'll be here all week.

    Posted by Noel at 05:32 PM | Comments (2) | TrackBack

    October 16, 2005

    Out to Lunch. Back on Wednesday

    In the meantime, browse my linkblog or flip through my entries tagged with .Net or Law Firm.

    Posted by Noel at 07:22 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack