A type of kitchen cart designed for a microwave to fit on top.
Decide on and arrange in advance
(plan) A debtor's detailed description of how the debtor proposes to pay creditors' claims over a fixed period of time.
Design or make a plan of (something to be made or built)
(Plan) This shows the ground plan design, elevation of house, number and size of rooms, kitchen, bathrooms, laundry layout and position of the house on the land.
Make preparations for an anticipated event or time
(401(K)plan) A qualified profit-sharing or thrift plan that allows eligible employees the option of putting moneyinto the plan or receiving the funds as cash.
Plans
Can your heart take this? Are you ready? Plans marks Death Cab for Cutie's major label debut. 11-tracks of pure indie pop that will further prove that Ben Gibbard and crew just can't do wrong. Atlantic. 2005.
When an indie-rock band as intimately and fiercely loved as Death Cab for Cutie makes the inevitable major-label jump, it often telegraphs a painful death. Witness Husker Du, the Replacements, Nirvana--hell, even R.E.M. After a successful four-album run on tiny Seattle imprint Barsuk, however, Death Cab for Cutie just might buck the trend on its Atlantic premiere. Yes, you can grumble about the production (a little too slick), the proportion of ballads (a little too many) and the overall feeling of restraint (a little too much), but ultimately the album delivers everything the group does best in emotional, experimental songs such as "What Sarah Said" and "I Will Follow You into the Dark," which both blend stark lyrical details with acoustic guitars and soft-focus electronics. In "Soul Meets Body," meanwhile, songwriter Ben Gibbard has come up with the kind of blissful, beatific pop song that's capable of disarming even the harshest skeptic. "A melody softly soaring through my atmosphere," he sings. --Aidin Vaziri Catching up with Death Cab for Cutie
Something About Airplanes
We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes
Forbidden Love [EP]
The Photo Album
You Can Play These Songs with Chords
Transatlanticism
86% (13)
planning the technology curriculum
I spent some time planning the 2008-2009 technology curriculum for Honey Creek today. Lots of ideas that have been percolating in the last few months got committed to paper, calendars got printed out, and much outlining was done. There's a lot left to do, but it's a good start!
just a little touch of something pretty
I gave the cabinet a scrub, and swapped out the ugly keychain for a cute tassel. That tiny change totally made a difference.
microwave cart plans
Japanese pressing includes the bonus track 'Jealousy Rides With Me'. Can your heart take this? Are you ready? Plans marks Death Cab for Cutie's major label debut. 12-tracks of pure indie pop that will further prove that Ben Gibbard and crew just can't do wrong. Includes the bonus track. Atlantic. 2005.
When an indie-rock band as intimately and fiercely loved as Death Cab for Cutie makes the inevitable major-label jump, it often telegraphs a painful death. Witness Husker Du, the Replacements, Nirvana--hell, even R.E.M. After a successful four-album run on tiny Seattle imprint Barsuk, however, Death Cab for Cutie just might buck the trend on its Atlantic premiere. Yes, you can grumble about the production (a little too slick), the proportion of ballads (a little too many) and the overall feeling of restraint (a little too much), but ultimately the album delivers everything the group does best in emotional, experimental songs such as "What Sarah Said" and "I Will Follow You into the Dark," which both blend stark lyrical details with acoustic guitars and soft-focus electronics. In "Soul Meets Body," meanwhile, songwriter Ben Gibbard has come up with the kind of blissful, beatific pop song that's capable of disarming even the harshest skeptic. "A melody softly soaring through my atmosphere," he sings. --Aidin Vaziri Catching up with Death Cab for Cutie