Feminist vodka. I'm all over it.
Well I know what I'm drinking tonight!
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Mad Dog 20/20 served in a Puma sneaker?
Not unless she's drinking at my house.
Um, you aren't, are you? Cause if so I need to grab some mop refills on the way home...
Just one more reason to love Iceland.
This makes me very happy.
Especially because Reyka is the only vodka i really like.
plus it's cheap.
yum.
Heehee. Love it.
Women are definitely good for more than one thing. For example, they can fix men drinks. With Icelandic vodka. Which would make me a feminist for sure, right?
that's a pretty great commercial :)
What a great commercial. Wow. Between this ad and Bjork, Iceland is at the top of my list of future vacation destinations.
Iceland rules! - Sylvia Iceland
Many other persons were engaged in supplying foodstuff and in activities on busy streets adjacent to the Games sites, at sight-seeing resorts, training sites, along the route of the Marathon and Walking races, and in providing lodgings for sightseers or private accommodation, etc. Surveillance and guidance of these were carried out on the basis of earlier applications to the sanitary authorities concerned.
The food poisoning incident at Oiso Detached Village has already been referred to in an earlier paragraph. Twenty-seven members of a Boy Scout troupe suffered from food poisoning on 16th September shortly after the opening of the Village on 15th September. The box lunches had been prepared by the kitchen of the Oiso Long Beach Hotel Annex. Fortunately, food intended for the athletes and officials was not involved, having been prepared in a different kitchen. One of the members of the Soviet Union fencing team made an adverse report concerning a box lunch prepared by the Village restaurant. An immediate bacteria inspection was undertaken but revealed no dangerous food condition. The athlete concerned and his teammates were assured that all was in order.
There were, therefore, very few instances of trouble. Most of the facilities of the Olympic Games were newly built for the Games or were existing buildings acquired temporarily for the Games periods. Considerable effort, in fact, and careful planning by the staff concerned resulted in the prevention of any serious trouble or accident which would interfere with the Olympic Games and events.
With the knowledge that in Japan, 70% of the epidemic cases are traceable to dysentery, efforts were centered chiefly on dysentery prevention. The sanitation authorities were requested to instruct workers in businesses and food and drink handlers to cooperate in the detection of dysentery germs. As a result, there was not a single case of dysentery among the workers in the Olympic facilities. Adequate measures were taken to deal with dysentery cases in other places and no Olympic personnel were affected by the disease during the period.