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| http://taniaroxborogh.com/uggsaustraliauk.html If Koko the Gorilla had her way, AOL might indicate Animals On Line. News About AnimalsThe gorilla, who makes her home near San francisco bay area and communicates in sign language, made her debut online Monday for a chat session with the public. As many as 8,000 America Online members logged on Monday night to talk with the 26-year-old western lowland gorilla. With the help of her interpreter and handler Penny Patterson, Koko chatted back using sign language to explain colors, her dreams and her cats. "She was really relaxed," said Patterson. "She was being thoughtful. She was really contemplating these questions."More than 13,000 questions were submitted, though Koko addressed lower than a dozen. The gorilla's online conversation was the 5th busiest in AOL history, trailing chat sessions with Rosie O'Donnell, Michael Jackson, Michael Jordan along with the teen-age pop group Hanson. The gorilla, who conducted the chat session from the kitchen of her home at the Gorilla Foundation's Woodside facilities, has been tutored for 25 years in American Sign Language. She gets a working vocabulary of 500 signs, in accordance with the Gorilla Foundation. Koko's attention wandered as she played with her toy alligator. After Forty-five minutes, she lost all interest and began playing with her dolls. But sometimes she was responsive enough to impress her cyberspace interlocutors. She even received a married relationship proposal, to which she did not respond. When questioned about her favorite beverage, Koko responded with "apple drink.". "Eat now," Koko signed to Patterson when the gorilla was asked whether she was hungry. "Red red," Koko said when she desired to play with a red hair tie. "Foot," Koko replied when asked about a male human. Koko covered her face when asked if she had ever like to have a baby. Patterson said Koko couldn't quite conceptualize events in the foreseeable future well enough to address them. Brenda Smith, who logged on from Port Wing, Wis., and sometimes moderates Internet chat sessions with soap opera stars, said Koko did well compared. "I think that animals are far more intelligent than we allow them to have credit for," she said. "I don't feel a bit offended about being descended from her." http://www.rotarysouth.org/michaelkors-com.html "This has been a tough moment to me, but I've always needed to battle. And this is just another battle. In my opinion with all my heart and faith in God that we will overcome this. I am about to be back on the basketball court doing what I have been doing the last two years." http://gcthulin.com/classicuggboots-uk.html The American Airlines jet that crashed from the edge of a runway at Little Rock National Airport, an excellent MD-80, is a narrow-body jet derived from a DC-9. The MD-80, produced by McDonnell Douglas' commercial airframe division in Long Beach, Calif., is a twin-jet version of the more widely known DC-9, which has a single aisle and an engine on either side of the tail. The MD-80 entered service in 1980 and has had no less than five variations (including the Super) offering different ranges, seating capacities and cockpit electronics. The jetliners sold for $26 million twenty six years ago and have been flown by so many airlines on short-to-medium trips. The MD-80 series was almost solely to blame for returning the St. Louis-based McDonnell Douglas to profitability in 1985 after higher than a decade of red ink.BOEINGThe Super MD-80 is a narrow-bodied jet, certified by the FAA in August of 1980. It is a modern-technology successor to the DC-9 twinjet. The MD-80 is 147 feet, 11 inches long and accommodates 144 passengers inside a two-class configuration. Its nonstop flying range originates from 1,580 to 2,750 statute miles, with respect to the model. American Airlines operates the most important fleet of MD-80s at 260.(AP, Boeing)The MD-80 is a very reliable airplane,CBS News Correspondent Bob Orr reports. It really is most commonly used by American Airlines on short routes. In November 1997, the Boeing Co. announced it might phase out the MD-80 and MD-90 passenger aircraft models it inherited if it bought McDonnell Douglas. Boeing's Web site says that 1,167 copies of various MD-80 versions have been delivered. American Airlines operates the greatest number of MD-80s, a fleet of 260. On Aug. 16, 1987, a Northwest Airlines MD-80 crashed on takeoff at Detroit Metropolitan Airport, killing 156. http://taniaroxborogh.com/uggclassictall-uk.html Four months after Hurricane Katrina, efforts with the Federal Emergency Management Agency to set displaced victims into trailers are increasingly being hindered by communities balking at hosting such trailers, reports CBS News Correspondent Trish Regan.Many families from New Orleans are still living in tent cities, shelters and hotels since they wait for FEMA trailers to become available.The thing is particularly pressing for those staying in hotels, since FEMA only offers to foot those bills through January, Regan says.She spoke with Schwanda Richard, who lost her where you can Katrina and has been crammed into a hotel for months."We gotta get out of here by the end of next month," Richard frets, "so we're gonna emerge. … We're gonna have to get a trailer. Plus it seems they're taking such a long time to get us a trailer, and we're looking for what is the problem."The problem, Regan explains, is not that there aren't enough trailers available. They're seemingly everywhere: on rail cars, in parking lots, on softball fields.FEMA says they have nearly 18,000 in Louisiana. The trailers are, as Regan input it, all dressed up, but with room to go.Everyone agrees the trailers are a fantastic idea, Regan observes. But nobody, it seems like, wants them in their neighborhood.Shea Craig lives next door to the Lakewood Country Club in New Orleans.Mayor Ray Nagin announced intends to put 1000 trailers there.Craig wasn't happy."It was simply scary being a single mom with an eight-month-old and not knowing 5,000 people living in the thousand trailers across the street," she says.Julie Hunt also worries about new neighbors on club grounds, telling Regan, "We moved here to experience a nice neighborhood and a safety for the kids, and you just gotta bother about so many people in such a small area."The neighborhood's city councilman is battling Nagin's proposal.At FEMA's largest-ever trailer park, in Punta Gorda, Fla., built after Hurricane Charley last year, accusations about drug dealing, domestic abuse, theft and vandalism were rampant, Regan says.Despite those concerns, some, for example New Orleans resident Virginia Dengel, say this extraordinary event requires extraordinary cooperation: "It's not business as always, for God's sake. It isn't business as usual. It's an emergency."But, Regan suggests, the mayor and City Council can not seem to get beyond politics as they continue to argue over where the trailers moves. In the meantime, thousands are in need of the trailers.And, Regan notes, the NIMBY effect surpasses the Big Easy itself: 50 % of Louisiana's parishes have banned new trailer parks. http://fotoristo.com/uggbootsonsalewarm.html The guilt or innocence of Dr. Sam Sheppard is again the main topics a courtroom drama.Nearly one half century ago, Sheppard was convicted of murdering his pregnant wife in a case that inspired it series and movie, The Fugitive . He spent Ten years behind bars before he was acquitted in a second trial in 1966. Now, his son, Sam Reese Sheppard, will almost certainly court. He has filed suit, accusing your Ohio of wrongfully imprisoning his father, who lived a secluded life after his release and died in 1970."I believe the state of Ohio should be responsible and in charge of the mistakes that they made," Sheppard said Monday on CBS News' The Early Show. "My dad faced the death penalty. He was almost executed as well as the case was never resolved."Even though Dr. Sheppard was later cleared, his son believes he was "villified to death."The U.S. Supreme court ruled that Sheppard had been denied a reasonable trial because of the massive pre-trial publicity true engendered. That decision, said Sheppard's son with his fantastic attorney Terry Gilbert, was a landmark ruling that also influences the nation's judicial system. Gilbert says the preponderance of evidence that they plans to present at trial is physical evidence accumulated over time and will show his father's innocence. "Certainly, evidence was hidden," young Sheppard said of the original trial. "My dad lived a miserable life in the prison, which has been before prison reform, anf the husband was badgered to death essentially. He was released and lived in legal limbo for 2 years, had a fair trial and yes it showed he was innocent as well as the state threw up its hands and says, 'oh, she got a slick lawyer and also got off.' That's section of the legend and we mean to alter that."If the two can convince a jury that Ohio would have been to blame, the case will then navigate to the state capital and the question of damages will be raised.For his own part, young Sheppard, who had previously been seven when his mother was murdered, is searching for closure with his lawsuit. He says he suffers from unresolved trauma and grief and hopes the most recent trial will put that to rest."This struggle of ours has allowed me to find out new equipment about my mother's murder," he said. "I believe we have solved the truth." http://muvdigital.net/ No Punishment 39% In reality, by two to one, the population rejects the argument which a doctor injecting a terminally ill person with a lethal dose of medicine should be considered the same thing as murder. If the DOCTOR INJECTS LETHAL DRUGS With a TERMINALLY ILL PERSONS REQUEST, Could be that the SAME AS MURDER? Yes 30%
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