Saturday, October 28, 2017

What Is Difference Between A Vending Machine And A Game Console??



I will not play the game of how is the for to example a card from the book of stature,
should the verse go to a soar than the proverb is to ship,
in never is the inch as the measure is the ink.

As lend is the file to word off the keen is the wild mirrored or the key note,
dip Well with a stuck to bucket owned,
bigger than shore is the land or that sand that river of sift?

Rise to a rib at the Riddle,
type skeet,
arm to elbow is a bend at the wrist,
did then pail more too?

Handle of a connection as the swing is it's pivot,
ground did more to mud as the floor,
tile is the crockery that plates Oil to drill's screw,
which is the path that bricks is it forge?

Heave rock to Salt,
gear that with a water called Ocean or bay,
vocal language echoes at what to a wave,
with clay.

Bubble dot is a pencil frame,
puzzle is a lane,
pieces are the usage,
yet what of the grave.

Sim aye coal lens Mark,
a capital changes with Len and yet plural is only glasses?,
place the knows?



What's black and white and read all over.

Sensorama

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Sensorama, from U.S. Patent #3050870

The Sensorama machine (scriptanime.wordpress.com)
The Sensorama was a machine that is one of the earliest known examples of immersive, multi-sensory (now known as multimodal) technology. Morton Heilig, who today would be thought of as a "multimedia" specialist, in the 1950s saw theater as an activity that could encompass all the senses in an effective manner, thus drawing the viewer into the onscreen activity. He dubbed it "Experience Theater", and detailed his vision of multi-sensory theater in his 1955 paper entitled "The Cinema of the Future" (Robinett 1994). In 1962 he built a prototype of his vision, dubbed the Sensorama, along with five short films for it to display. The Sensorama was a mechanical device, which still functions today.
Howard Rheingold (in his 1991 book Virtual Reality) spoke of his trial of the Sensorama using a short film piece that detailed a bicycle ride through Brooklyn, created in the 1950s, and still seemed quite impressed by what it could do more than 40 years later. The Sensorama was able to display stereoscopic 3-D images in a wide-angle view, provide body tilting, supply stereo sound, and also had tracks for wind and aromas to be triggered during the film. Oddly enough in hindsight, Heilig was simply unable to obtain financial backing for his visions and patents, and so the Sensorama work was halted.









Surely practicing law is not a pass from the State Bar of California to part what was my family.  This cannot be the true fast of what my mother said and yet here in black and white and read all over seems somehow complete and only applicable to the years that have been removed bringing envelope to nothing more than and nothing less than this notation for my two youngest to real eyes and say to only themselves.

For I it is not and this will not be an address to Steven L. Wessels of Sacramento, California in any manner other than this finally explains in plain newsprint the why Mr. Steven L. Wessels, attorney at-law in Sacramento, California was able to maintain only a post office box and not only brag about it but in process bring my court case to such a horror that today his client, the father of my two youngest children may be full to brim of pride.  May all the guilt be by conviction.


ABOUT ME


I was raised on a farm in East Central Illinois with six siblings, and enlisted in the Army for four years in late 1966 to avoid the draft. I was trained as a North Vietnamese Linguist, and spent a year in Viet Nam, with a year in Japan and a side-trip to Thailand for three months. After the service I worked for three years as a deputy sheriff in Northern California, which triggered my desire to become an attorney.

While I am no longer practicing law, I was involved in all aspects of family law litigation since early 1981, with the primary emphasis on custody cases, and I’ve helped a number of families with parental terminations / step-parent and private adoption issues. With the lack of legislative guidelines, I created on-demand drug testing standards for family law cases in 1986 and began suggesting them in several counties. I also hosted an hour-long weekly call-in talk show on a local Christian AM radio station from 1987 to 1994, and have occasionally testified in the legislature on varying issues. I’ve also hosted a number of parental rights seminars, and should have my first book on family law litigation in print by the end of 2015. It’s titled The Lighted Switch and should be available on my website shortly.

Professionally, I’ve been a member of the nationwide Christian Legal Society since 1976, and was the Sacramento area lead attorney in the 1994 statewide lawsuits against the California Department of Education to stop the wholesale invasion of parental and children’s rights with the California Learning Assessment Tests, known as the CLAS tests.
Personally, I’ve helped launch two children and three step-children, and began writing poetry in February of 1997. I learned the absolute necessity of surrendering my will to God in 1976 and currently attend a local Covenant church with my family. I’m currently working on four more books for strengthening marriages.

My second book to be titled Great Foundations should be in print before the end of 2016. My deepest desire is to show teens and young married couples the path to great marital relationships that thrive the way God intended for us to live.

 
Home  /   About Us  /  His Poetry  /  Family Law Q & A  /  Contact Us  /  Terms of Use  /  Buy Online
 Phone: (916) 359-0307  
Copyright © 2015 Steve Wessels. All rights Reserved.
Steve Wessels is no longer practicing law, and the general information contained within this website should not be relied on in any jurisdiction for legal advice. Every case turns on different facts and circumstances within the vastly different laws and procedures of each jurisdiction, and everyone who is seeking legal advice should consult an experienced attorney where they live.
 


No comments: