Is there officially no limit to a thread's number of pages-posts?
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Save, save, save! You can still make it. I have two tickets and there's only one Danny! |
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I should move to London, by the way. |
hello there, im watching the return of the king extras.
which makes me wonder..... (to be continued in the non sonics section) |
oo my carnaval vacations are almost over.
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hahaha tb gostei das novelas do super mario e do pes... mto bom mto bom
vêm viver para portugal... |
finally i learnt that killing an arab solo. its not hard only roberts jazzmaster is so bassy you cant hear half the notes.
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I'm bored and sleepy.
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nicfit- apparently, there is no limit. but that's good.
danny- hee, i love you. sup victor! buzzo- ahh, rad. |
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huh?
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Albert Lincoln Roker (born August 20, 1954) is an American television broadcaster, best known as the weather anchor for NBC's Today show. He holds American Meteorological Society Television Seal #238.
He seems like such a clean happy happy joy joy kind of person. But here he is cursing and talking about how his Dad died. On an unrelated note. I met some girls from Lincoln, UK |
How did you happen to meet Lincoln girls?
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They were exchange students and someome was showing them around the school. My goofy reading teacher made them all uncomfortable when she said "Look they have normal names like us!"
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Haha. I wish I could be an exchange student.
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It would be interesting! But I've never been away from home for more then two weeks, I would get very homesick
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Mummified man likely died of natural causes
February 19, 2007, 10:11 PM EST Confirmation that a Hampton Bays man had been dead for 13 months, seated in front of a TV set that was still on, came from dates on prescription medications and expiration dates on milk and egg cartons, police said Monday. Investigators expect by week's end to have an official cause of death for Vincenzo Riccardi, 70, whose mummified body was found in his secluded home Thursday after he had been dead for more than a year, police said. All evidence, including a lack of visible injuries, seems to point to a death by natural causes, so the investigation is all but over, pending autopsy results expected in the next few days, Southampton Police Det. Sgt. Randy Hintz said."We're looking at a time of death sometime in January [2006]," he said. The retired construction worker, a widower considered by neighbors to be a recluse, was discovered after police came to investigate burst pipes at the unheated home. The TV screen displayed only static as police entered the room, Hintz said. "Everything appeared natural. ... He was sitting there, in a stuffed chair, in front of the TV. The power was on to the TV, but the signal was disconnected." Riccardi lived alone, and because he was blind, he had presumably turned the set on just to listen to it, Hintz said. Still unclear to the police is why his electricity was still on. "We don't know how the bills were paid, whether it was direct debits or a family member was paying," Hintz said. LIPA spokesman Michael Lowndes said the utility's privacy policy does not allow him to comment. "His account is confidential, as are all LIPA customer accounts," Lowndes said, although he added that he was unsure whether ratepayer privacy extends after death. Neighbors said they had tried to keep an eye on Riccardi, who had diabetes and had been blind for two decades, but because his house was up a long driveway and could not be seen from the street, they did not always know what he was doing. The neighbors had seen mail piling up, but assumed he had been hospitalized or placed in a nursing home. |
Cricket World Cup fever is gripping India and it's driving one car designer completely batty. K Sudhakar has spent the last six months designing a cricket bat-shaped car to cheer on the Indian team. He said: "I have designed and built a cricket bat shaped car and it is about 25 feet in length and it can travel at 60 kmph." Mr Sudhakar has been designing and building cars since he was 14, displaying over 150 vehicles moulded in unusual shapes including a suitcase, camera and a toilet. But his latest creation is dedicated to the Indian cricket boys about to head off to the Caribbean to compete for World Cup glory. The country's back-to-back victories over the West Indies and Sri Lanka in recent weeks have raised hopes of cricket-mad fans at home. At the car's unveiling one cricket fan said: "It is very good. It is splendid idea. Good idea for this World Cup." Video here |
Fighting surgeons leave patient in the lurch
Reuters - Thursday, 22 February 2007 BELGRADE: A routine appendix operation in Belgrade went badly wrong when two surgeons started fighting and stormed from the operating theatre to settle their dispute outside, the daily Politika reported on Wednesday. Surgeon Spasoje Radulovic was operating when his colleague Dragan Vukanic entered and made a remark that started a quarrel, said the anaesthesiologist on duty. "At one moment Vukanic pulled the ear of the operating doctor, slapped him in the face and walked out," she said. Radulovic followed and an all-out fight ensued, resulting in bruises, a split lip, loose teeth and a fractured finger. The operation was completed successfully by the attending assistant doctor. |
That reminds me of when I went on holiday to Russia about twenty years ago, and unfortunately an old guy died of a heart attack while we on a tour a few miles outside St Petersburg. An ambulance came rushing to the guy's aid, but once the drivers saw that he was beyond help they became more interested in arguing over who was going to get drive the ambulance back to the hospital.
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