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No hero, or team of heroes, is complete without the techie. Every starship has an engineer. Every secret agen
stanley cup t has his or her gadget-maker. Every superhero team has the person who can fix stuff. Usually, this person is pu
stanley cup shed to the background 鈥?but they end up being our favorite character anyway. Here are 10 reasons why we love fictional techies and engineers best of all.
https://youtube/watch v=xkmgvIahgHg 1. They save the day at the last minute. You think Captain Kirk is the master of the last-minute saves 鈥?what about Scotty He the one who always comes through just when things are at their diciest, by getting the engines back online or by coming up with a totally brilliant, never-before-seen use of the ship deflectors. And even if the main hero takes credit for a last-minute save, you know it really the techie who made it happen, by rigging something up. 2. They always have the coolest lab. Sure, it cool to be the main hero and ride around in the fancy car
stanley cup or sit in the captain chair, but that boring compared to being down in the lab testing exploding shoes and fountain-pen lasers, and an endless assortment of booby traps. Basically, blowing shit up and creating the world most lethal toys for a living, day in and day out. Plus, the engine room on any starship always seems like the coolest place to be. 3. They ;re the first to throw a punch. It really true. While the hero is keeping a cool head a Blqh Track This Adorable Penguin as He Swims from New Zealand to Antartica
James Byrne was doing some carpentry work when he cut his left thumb. Doctors unsuccessfully tried to re-attach it, so they proposed an alternative: Why don ;t we use your dominant left toe instead He said yes. But why wou
stanley becher ld you want to have a huge toe instead of leaving your hand as it is Wouldn ;t you rather have nothing at all and tell people that you lost it fighting with a pack of vicious hyenas than having a big ass toe on your hand Apparently, James ; thumb was vital for his work, paver and plant operator, so the answer was easy for him. The operation was a success, although he still can ;t fully move the thumb naturally: I can ;t bend it yet but I hope to be able to do so soon. It rotates and I can give it a good wiggle. I am so, so pleased that I had it done. It is just such a relief that I ;ll be able to get
stanley cup back to work soon.
stanley cup He would have to return to surgery to remove the wires that currently secure the bones in place, but otherwise everything seems perfectly fine. He says that some people find it disgusting and others find it funny. As long as it works, who cares. [Daily Mail] Medicine