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Was that for you and me....?
I"m in the office...call.
Is the same true for emails..?
Duh.....
Do you ever read your e mail...?
"but he sang the National Anthem a lot better than I could, no matter how old he is."
I doubt you know the words...:o)
That's seems fair.
And remain seated....?
Hey Peggy Sue!
Sandcastles.....
http://www.rense.com/general76/sandcastles.htm
Hope you enjoy this.
Maybe it's time to plant a garden......
http://www.procreo.jp/labo/flower_garden.swf
Left click and hold as you scroll across the black space.
Bobo Brazil.......
http://www.wwe.com/superstars/halloffame/bobobrazil/profile/
likwit....Let's talk about your spam first...K
Must be, according to susie's ilk.
I suggest your reading comprehension is lacking.....Where am I making excuses for this mad man.
I simply stated the facts....You were wrong.
Susie...Take a break,you're up to 56 post for the day and 66995 total.
Gawd get a life!
Susie are you losing it.....?
Did you take a moment to reflect on the tragedy without trying to make it a political issue?
Gunman contacted NBC News during massacre
Rambling communication, video being examined by FBI, network says
MSNBC
Updated: 1 minute ago
Sometime after he killed two people in a Virginia university dormitory but before he slaughtered 30 more in a classroom building Monday morning, Cho Seung-Hui sent NBC News a rambling communication and videos about his grievances, the network said Wednesday.
Cho, 23, a senior English major at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, killed 32 people in two attacks Monday before taking his own life.
Network officials turned the material over to the FBI and said they would not immediately disclose its contents beyond characterizing the material as “disturbing.” It included a written communication, photographs and video.
Brian Williams, anchor and managing editor of “NBC Nightly News,” said in a posting on the program’s “Daily Nightly” blog that the communication was received earlier Wednesday. He described it as a very long “multimedia manifesto.”
The package, timestamped in the two-hour window between Monday's shootings, was sent to NBC News head Steve Capus.Police said the development might be "a very new, critical component of this investigation.""We're in the process right now of attempting to analyze and evaluate its worth," said Col. Steve Flaherty, superintendent of Virginia State Police.
As early as 2005, police and school administrators were wrestling with what to do with Cho, who was accused of stalking two female students and was sent to a mental health facility after police obtained a temporary detention order.
The two women complained to campus police that Cho was contacting them with “annoying” telephone calls and e-mail messages in November and December 2005, campus Police Chief Wendell Flinchum said.
Cho was referred to the university’s disciplinary system, but Flinchum said the woman declined to press charges, and the case apparently never reached a hearing.
Detention order issued
However, after the second incident, the department received a call from an acquaintance of Cho’s, who was concerned that he might be suicidal, Flinchum said. Police obtained a temporary detention order from a local magistrate, and in December of that year, Cho was voluntarily but briefly admitted to Carilion St. Albans Behavioral Health Center in Radford, NBC News’ Jim Popkin reported.
To issue a detention order under Virginia law, a magistrate must find both that the subject is “mentally ill and in need of hospitalization or treatment” and that the subject is “an imminent danger to himself or others, or is so seriously mentally ill as to be substantially unable to care for himself.”
According to a doctor’s report accompanying the order, which was first reported by the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Cho was “depressed,” but “his insight and judgment are normal.” The doctor, a clinical psychologist who was not identified, noted that Cho “denies suicidal ideations.”
Under the law, the magistrate could have issued a stronger detention order mandating inpatient treatment, but there was no indication Wednesday that such an order was ever entered. A spokesman for Carilion St. Albans told NBC News that he could not discuss Cho’s case because of patient confidentiality and privacy laws, but he said the hospital was cooperating with the investigation.
Otherwise, Flinchum said, there were no further police incidents involving Cho until the deadly shootings Monday, first in a young woman’s dormitory room and then at a classroom building across campus. Neither of the alleged stalking victims was among the victims Monday.
In addition to the 33 people confirmed dead, including the gunman, nine people remained in hospitals in stable condition, hospital authorities said.
Health records sought
Campus police applied Wednesday for search warrants for all of Cho’s medical records from Schiffert Health Center on campus and New River Community Services in Blacksburg.
”It is reasonable to believe that the medical records may provide evidence of motive, intent and designs,” investigators wrote in the documents, according to The Associated Press.
Police searched Cho’s dorm room Tuesday and recovered, among other items, a chain and a combination lock, according to documents filed Wednesday. The front doors of Norris Hall, the classroom building, had been chained shut from the inside during the shooting rampage.
Other items that were seized included a folding knife; two computers, a hard disk and other computer disks; documents, books, notebooks and other writings; a digital camera; compact disks; and two Dremel tools, which are rotating tools used for cutting, sanding and other applications.
In an affidavit seeking the search warrant, police found a “bomb threat” note — directed at engineering school buildings — near the victims in the classroom building. In the past three weeks, Virginia Tech had received two other bomb threats; investigators said they had not connected those to Cho.
Family sought better life in U.S.
Cho arrived in the United States as an 8-year-old boy from South Korea in 1992 and was raised in an off-white, two-story townhouse in Centreville, Va., a suburb of Washington, where his parents worked at a dry cleaners. He graduated from Westfield High School in Chantilly in 2003.
Cho’s family moved to the United States in search of a better life, said the family’s landlady in South Korea. The family was poor and lived in a cheap basement apartment on the outskirts of Seoul, the woman told South Korean television Wednesday.
Cho had an older sister, Sun-Kyung, who graduated from Princeton University with an economics degree in 2004, Princeton officials confirmed.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18169776/
From what I have heard there was a very nominal, if any at all, background check.
Fact:He was cleared by both a fed and state instant background check.The only time when this is not required is if you purchase a gun at a swap meet or a private purchase.
Fact:His evaluation at the mental health facility was "voluntary" and not ordered by the courts and not part of any court records.
In who's community?
We've got wacky ass parents with no CLUE what the hell they are doing misguiding dumbass kids running rampant in this country
That's a broad brush you paint with.
The problem is your "past"is today.There lies the issue!
Don't be a poor sport....
Thanks...A great "pissing contest" today.
Sorry you and your Boy "soxless" lost...there will be other days!
No,no,No.....Your mother taught me!
You simple fool.....!
PeggySue...He's an old asshole with nothing better to do!
About time for you to change your "bag" old man!
Talk about "chicken shits"...look who shows up.
The original..."Pecker breath".
That doesn't bother Susie....as long as she thinks it's on her behaft.And she doesn't have to say it herself.
Fuck off old man!
A $10 wok replaces a $20,000 satellite dish
W. David Gardner
InformationWeek
(02/28/2007 4:36 PM EST)
Transmission techniques run the gamut from connecting tin cans with string to bouncing signals off the moon. But when it comes to saving money, it's likely no one can outdo the software programmer who substituted a $10 Chinese cooking wok for a $20,000 satellite dish on behalf of his New Zealand television station.
The New Zealand Herald this week reported the ingenious work of Ken Jones, who volunteered to help TV station 45 South transmit its signal from its studios to a distance spot that was 20 km (12.5 miles) away. A commercial satellite dish capable of doing the job would cost $20,000, according to the report.
Jones and a friend, Murray Bobbette, did mathematical calculations and proved "the curved metal face of a wok would have the same effect as a small satellite dish," according to the report.
"The $20,000 for a commercial link was just money we didn't have, so we bought several woks," said Jones. "We have spent a lot of time getting it right -- the first time we installed one we had it up a pole with the handle still on the end of the wok."
After tinkering with the approach, the system operated well over a 20-km range. The wok was reported to do the transmission job well and Jones said only a single wok is needed.
For a few years now, clever hobbyists have cobbled together woks and other parabolic kitchen utensils like strainers and vegetable steamers for wireless transmission, often for Wi-Fi enhancement.
Subject: KILLER BISCUITS WANTED FOR ATTEMPTED MURDER
Linda Burnett, 23, a resident of San Diego, was visiting her in-laws
and while there went to a nearby supermarket to pick up some
groceries. Several people noticed her sitting in her car with the windows rolled
up and with her eyes closed, with both hands behind the back of her
head.
One customer who had been at the store for a while became concerned
and walked over to the car. He noticed that Linda's eyes were now
open, and she looked very strange. He asked her if she was okay, and
Linda replied that she'd been shot in the back of the head, and had
been holding her brains in for over an hour.
The man called the paramedics, who broke into the car because the
doors were locked and Linda refused to remove her hands from her head.
When they finally got in, they found that Linda had a wad of bread
dough on the back of her head.
A Pillsbury biscuit canister had exploded from the heat, making a loud
noise that sounded like a gunshot, and the wad of dough hit her in the
back of her head. When she reached back to find out what it was, she
felt the dough and thought it was her brains.
She initially passed out, but quickly recovered and tried to hold her
brains in for over an hour until someone noticed and came to her aid.
Linda is a blonde and a Democrat, but I'm certain that's irrelevant.
Utah gunman, 18, was Muslim from Bosnia
Killed 5 in crowded shopping mall before being gunned down
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=54247
I hope you were drinking the cheap vodka when you posted all that!
Sharp as usual.......at least half the US corporation are incorporated in Delaware....do some home work and tell us why.
Actually..I'm more worried about your rabies vaccine.
Did you ever have small pox....?