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Aleluvscp

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Everything posted by Aleluvscp

  1. yea I really want to get some stuff at the concert!! :dance: I just have to figure out how to get the money for transportation first :confused: anyway Joe.. it's was awesome meeting you!! but I'm going to bed :( ttyl :nice:
  2. I don't have money or organized transportation :confused: I only have a dream and a concert ticket :lol: I'll get there somehow :confused:
  3. no I'm not in Uni yet ..I'm still not sure what I want to study.. I'm considering psychology and law but I really want to be sure as for working.. I sometimes work in a travel agency when I need the money :P ..I might need to work there during these 2 weeks so I can pay for travel expenses for the Coldplay concert what do you study btw?
  4. nah I'm done with high school what do you do?
  5. yay!! come visit me then!! :dance:
  6. not many people know english here in the south :( it's 12:24 am :lol:
  7. nope I don't know any italian :confused: lol I got the chance to see arizona during the day and during the night.. it was quite amazing!!
  8. yea it's really hard being away from LA cos italy's completely different. I live in southern italy..close to naples Joe you should go to the arizona show ..and take a tour through arizona if you haven't already ..I think it's amazing :D
  9. nope I'm going by myself and then I'm gonna meet with the Coldplayzone staff
  10. nope I was actually born in Colombia
  11. aw lucky!! I was supposed to see them at the hollywood bowl in 2003 but I couldn't go last minute cos my mom had to work that night. After that my mom just became very strict and she wouldn't let me go ..but I've got my ticket for the concert here in 15 days!! I just need 150 euros for train tickets :confused::(
  12. my mom married an italian guy :sick: I look forward to moving back to LA soon though.... I hope :P did you get to see coldplay live this year?
  13. really? awesome!! I've lived in LA since I was 8 and just moved to italy 6 months ago
  14. ya everyone seems to be doing the same today :lol: and thanx :nice: ..it IS very true.. they're my happiness and my life :) It's cheesy I know :P omg what part of cali are you from??
  15. I'm Ale ..nice to meet you joe :D
  16. Aww omg Jake I'm so sorry :( It's ok if you're not online for a while.. I really hope you and your family feel better. If anything you know me and Indy are here :) Lots of hugs jakey
  17. I'm glad nothing happened david :stunned: I think I'm getting used to car accidents :\
  18. Carla you're so prettyyyyyyy!! and I love your hair color!! :dance:
  19. no it doesn't :confused:
  20. Crews fan out in Texas to search for Ike victims At least 3 million people are without power; storm blamed for 2 deaths MSNBC News Services updated 2:03 a.m. ET Sept. 14, 2008 HOUSTON - Hurricane Ike weakened to a tropical depression as it headed across western Arkansas Sunday, after making landfall on the Texas Gulf Coast as a Category 2 hurricane, paralyzing Houston and flooding Galveston and other coastal areas. Rescuers in boats, helicopters and high-water trucks set out across the flood-stricken Texas coast on Saturday in a monumental effort to reach tens of thousands of people who stubbornly ignored warnings of "certain death" and tried to ride out the storm. The storm roared ashore hours before daybreak Saturday with 110-mph winds and towering waves, smashing houses, flooding thousands of homes, blowing out windows in Houston's skyscrapers, and cutting off power to more than 3 million people, perhaps for weeks. By evening, it appeared that Ike was not the single calamitous stroke that forecasters had feared. But the full extent of the damage — or even a rough sense of how many people may have perished — was still unclear, in part because many roads were impassable. Some authorities feared that this could instead become a slow-motion disaster, with thousands of victims trapped in their homes, waiting for days to be rescued. "We will be doing this probably for the next week or more. We hope it doesn't turn into a recovery," said Sheriff's Sgt. Dennis Marlow in Orange County, where 600 to 700 people had to be rescued from flooded homes. He said hundreds were probably still stranded. Many waited too long to leave By some estimates, more than 140,000 of the 1 million or so people who had been ordered to evacuate the coast as Ike drew near may have tried to tough it out. Many of them evidently realized the mistake too late, and pleaded with authorities in vain to save them overnight. Since Ike made landfall, there have been 940 rescues in Texas of people stranded in homes, vehicles and elsewhere, said Gov. Rick Perry's spokeswoman Allison Castle. In Louisiana, Gov. Bobby Jindal said nearly 600 people were plucked from Ike's floodwaters since Friday and that search and rescue teams believe the largest number of rescues was behind them. At 1 a.m. CDT Sunday, Ike's center was 105 miles west-northwest of Little Rock, Arkansas, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said. The storm carried top sustained winds near 35 mph, and was moving north-northeast near 24 mph. The center warned residents of Arkansas, northern Louisiana and southern Missouri that Ike was still dangerous and could unleash isolated tornadoes and dump from 3 to 8 inches of rain anywhere in a wide swath of the nation's midsection. Ronnie Sharp, 65, and his terrier-mix Princess, had to be rescued from his trailer in Orange County when water reached his knees. "I was getting too many snakes in the house, otherwise I would have stayed," Sharp said. He said he lost everything in the flood but his medicine and some cigarettes. After the storm had passed, National Guardsmen, members of the Coast Guard, FEMA representatives and state and local law enforcement authorities mobilized for what Gov. Rick Perry pronounced "the largest search-and-rescue operation in the history of the state of Texas." http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26637482?GT1=43001 :confused:

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