COLLEGE RINGS : VELVET RING BOXES : CLASS RING STYLES.
This truly mobile laptop notebook backpack consists of multiple compartments for all of your school books and stationary. Multiple compartment let you organize your daily essentials. Rain flip protects front compartment with 2 accessory pockets, 1 mesh pocket and 1 pen holder from elements. Adjustable S-shaped padded shoulder straps with daisy chain and cell phone mesh pocket for easy access. 2 water bottle mesh pockets. D-ring and daisy chain on front panel to carry extra gears. Audio player pocket with port to accommodate headset cords. Air mesh padded back panel for wearing comfort. Perfect carry-on for airplane or works great for day-to-day transport needs.
* Color: Black
Just messing around with my camera and decided to make my own version of Danny Presson's ring photo already in the group . . . and since I haven't yet taken a UH photo since joining, I decided to take this shot.
I get to Houston about twice a year and I'll be sure to have camera in hand next time I visit the alma mater.
My Nursing College Ring, Batch '07
[remade 14k White Gold 22grams] - Gift from my loving parents. =]
Clifton Webb brings the imperious fussiness that made him a prissy film noir icon in such films as Laura and The Dark Corner to the role of Lynn Belvedere, the self-proclaimed genius who takes a position nannying a trio of bratty boys. This professed child-hating bachelor proves to be a godsend for flustered parents Maureen O'Hara and Robert Young. Within days his unconventional mix of child psychology and strict discipline tames the three rambunctious boys--faced with an infant who insists on spattering him with oatmeal, he simply dumps the bowl on the tyke's head. The trouble in paradise begins when a snoopy neighbor spreads gossip about an affair between Belvedere and the mother of the house, which sends hot-headed Dad into a tizzy, but just as things look their darkest Belvedere turns the tables on the neighborhood when the real reason of his suburban relocation is revealed. Director Walter Lang underplays his hand so much that the film takes on all the style of a 1950s TV sitcom, but his fine direction of performers brings out the humor of this middle-class satire with warmth and wit. Ultimately, however, the film belongs to Webb, whose witheringly snide insults and cutting comments roll off his tongue with comic effortlessness. He proved so popular that he starred in a pair of sequels: Mr. Belvedere Goes to College and Mr. Belvedere Rings the Bell. --Sean Axmaker