CS's Pith Helmet CS writes: "This is me wearing one of your fine Pith Helmets in front of one of Saddam Hussein's former palaces - Baghdad Iraq. I have both styles of pith helmets and I get questions every day about them. I always mention your web site. Thanks!"
…their money. Nothing else was discussed. Not a beep (not a quick aside, not a fast reference or analogy, not a short digression) about the war in Iraq, global warming, AIDS in Africa – nothing, but “Marketing Your Retail Website”, “Taking E-Retailing to the Next Level”, etc, non-stop, ad…
…their money. Nothing else was discussed. Not a beep (not a quick aside, not a fast reference or analogy, not a short digression) about the war in Iraq, global warming, AIDS in Africa – nothing, but “Marketing Your Retail Website”, “Taking E-Retailing to the Next Level”, etc, non-stop, ad…
…(Hats having this kind of power and meaning is a recurring theme in history.) Men who wore fezzes were imprisoned. When monarchies were overthrown in Iraq, Egypt, and Libya, the fez was condemned by the new regimes. Many men, for the first time, went bareheaded. The name “fez” comes from the Moroccan…
…(Hats having this kind of power and meaning is a recurring theme in history.) Men who wore fezzes were imprisoned. When monarchies were overthrown in Iraq, Egypt, and Libya, the fez was condemned by the new regimes. Many men, for the first time, went bareheaded. The name “fez” comes from the Moroccan…
…October 2003, Senator Robert Byrd declared that the Bush administration's declarations that it wanted the United Nations as a partner in transforming Iraq were "All Hat and No Cattle". [This Texas expression refers to men who dress the part of powerful cattlemen, but don't have the herds back home.] To…
…October 2003, Senator Robert Byrd declared that the Bush administration's declarations that it wanted the United Nations as a partner in transforming Iraq were "All Hat and No Cattle". [This Texas expression refers to men who dress the part of powerful cattlemen, but don't have the herds back home.] To…
…(Hats having this kind of power and meaning is a recurring theme in history.) Men who wore fezzes were imprisoned. When monarchies were overthrown in Iraq, Egypt, and Libya, the fez was condemned by the new regimes. Many men, for the first time, went bareheaded. The name “fez” comes from the Moroccan…
…(Hats having this kind of power and meaning is a recurring theme in history.) Men who wore fezzes were imprisoned. When monarchies were overthrown in Iraq, Egypt, and Libya, the fez was condemned by the new regimes. Many men, for the first time, went bareheaded. The name "fez" comes from the Moroccan city…
…October 2003, Senator Robert Byrd declared that the Bush administration's declarations that it wanted the United Nations as a partner in transforming Iraq were "All Hat and No Cattle". [This Texas expression refers to men who dress the part of powerful cattlemen, but don't have the herds back home.] To…