Oh, I've read about these, apparently the scribes drew similar images when they were bored under the impression that nobody is going to read it anyway (which was true for Medieval times).
That is Lucien Petit-Breton, first person to win back to back Tours in 1907 and 1908.
Found the pic here
You are far more observant than I am.
I searched for something that looked like an old score and the one that said Mozart popped up.
This site titles the piece as "Three Flute Quartets, C major, K.s.631, D major, K.285 en A major, K.298".
I am going out on a limb and saying that the "K.S." number is not the same as the "K" number.
My wife is the classical music "expert".
I am more in tune with Frank Zappa ;)
Sólo una adaptación de un meme clásico. Básicamente intento convencerte para que estudies un idioma en una academia, en lugar de recomendarte que te inscribas en un gimnasio, como sucede en el meme original.
Nope:
>An interesting little claim sprang up in the wake of the introduction of Classic Coke, one having to do with its sweetener. People swore they detected a change in the flavor between Classic Coke and the original. This gave rise to the rumor that the product had been reformulated, dropping cane sugar in favor of high fructose corn syrup (HFCS). Depending upon whom you listened to, either the demand for the return of original Coca-Cola afforded the company the opportunity to switch from cane sugar to corn syrup or the whole fiasco of taking original Coca-Cola off the shelves and reintroducing it three months later as Classic Coke was all a brilliant scheme to mask the change in sweetener. According to whispered wisdom, the company had hoped to slip the modification past consumers by having it take place during the original beverage's absence from the shelves. People would be so darned glad to have Classic Coke back that they wouldn't notice it didn't taste the same as original Coca-Cola. (Another twist to this rumor had it that New Coke had deliberately been formulated to taste awful in order to facilitate the switch — this supposedly gave Coca-Cola an excuse for pulling the original formula and then putting it back on the market after a brief absence, making it look all along as if they were simply responding to consumer demands.)
>The change in sweetener wasn't anything that diabolical. Corn syrup was cheaper than cane sugar; that's what it came down to. In 1980, five years before the introduction of New Coke, Coca-Cola had begun to allow bottlers to replace half the cane sugar in Coca-Cola with HFCS. By six months prior to New Coke's knocking the original Coca-Cola off the shelves, American Coca-Cola bottlers were allowed to use 100% HFCS. Whether they knew it or not, many consumers were already drinking Coke that was 100% sweetened by HFCS.
That shit annoys me, but the State's rights myth also raises my blood pressure. Alexander Stephens was the VP of the confederacy and he had this to say, "The new constitution has put at rest, forever, all the agitating questions relating to our peculiar institution African slavery as it exists amongst us the proper status of the negro in our form of civilization. This was the immediate cause of the late rupture and present revolution."