Fort Wood Hotel

Boards

Devils Elbow

Attractions

Sports

St. Robert

Waynesville

PCW Home

Dixon

Menu Guide

Fun Links

Homework

Crocker

Fort Wood

Swedeborg

Big Piney

Laquey

PCW Home

Restaurants

Richland

Fort Wood Hotels

Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - littlebit

2251
Tell us your favorite Joke / Re: Golf joke
« on: April 09, 2008, 07:45:38 PM »
I caught the gist of it the first time. Some people might find it hilarious. Maybe it is just that my sense of humor is on the fritz.....
Again I do not mean to offend anyone, but I did not find it that funny at all.


2252
Tell us your favorite Joke / Re: Golf joke
« on: April 09, 2008, 06:45:28 PM »
While I may not be an avid golfer, I have played on occasion.
I did not mean to offend any regular or professional golfers.
I just do not think it to be that funny.
 
 
He should have asked for a mulligan.

2253
Tell us your favorite Joke / Re: Golf joke
« on: April 09, 2008, 06:09:04 PM »
No offence Suzi, but this has my vote for the worst joke ever... lol

2254
National Political Opinion / Re: Top 32 Political Slogans For 2008
« on: April 09, 2008, 05:42:20 PM »
Some of these are old, but some are kinda funny.
I have a feeling you might lose karma over this post.

2255
National Political Opinion / How political parties differ.
« on: April 09, 2008, 12:19:13 AM »
Inform yourself about all the parties from their own websites.
 
Constitution Party: www.constitutionparty.com
Democratic Party: www.democrats.org
Green Party: www.gp.org
Independent American Party: www.usiap.org
Libertarian Party: www.lp.org
Reform Party: www.reformparty.org
Republican Party (Grand Old Party): www.gop.com

2256
Local News / Re: Unofficial Election Results
« on: April 09, 2008, 12:05:52 AM »
Thanks for posting the results Rick...~

Agreed! I appreciate it too.

2257
Anyone ever watch Wishmaster? Just don't think I could wear jewels from someones remains and not wonder if their soul is in there also
(I've watched WAY too many horror movies)
&^&&( !!!@#$%^

2258
Local News / Re: Race for Sheriff
« on: April 08, 2008, 07:29:48 AM »
Does anyone have a link to the Sheriff Deputy's Association website? How does one go about donating to them? What percentage of our donations actually go to the cause?
Any info would be appreciated.

2259
County Government Opinion / Re: TAXES FOR LAW ENFORCMENT
« on: April 08, 2008, 07:18:18 AM »
I know its a bit off topic but how does this karma thing work cause i dont have any. Does that mean I always post bad things cause I dont post that often? Someone explain please and how to fix it.

Go post in the karma thread. The more karma you give other people, the more they will give in return.

2260
RECALLS / Re: Dozens of Brands of Cereal Recalled
« on: April 07, 2008, 09:15:45 PM »
Thank goodness that my children have always insisted on brand name cereal.

2261
Restaurant Opinion / Re: Paradise Deli
« on: April 07, 2008, 02:19:15 PM »
They are tearing the old place down. R.I.P. Mitch's hamburger stand. Ursela says they are trying to find another place to rent on the square.

2262
Local News / Re: Girl hit on a bike?
« on: April 07, 2008, 12:30:46 AM »
I hope she will be ok.

2263
Crime Stopper / Re: Aluminum Thieves
« on: April 07, 2008, 12:00:13 AM »
Do they still sell salt rock loads? Are they even legal nowadays?

2264
State News / Drag Racing Not Uncommon in Columbia
« on: April 06, 2008, 10:45:02 PM »
A Mid-Missouri drag race takes a turn for the worse in the same spot police have seen problems before.
Authorities say a Columbia man was racing his car when he lost control and crashed into a parked semi-truck just before one Sunday morning on Lemone Industrial Boulevard in the south part of the city.
The driver, 21-year-old Boston Hatcher was taken to the hospital with minor injuries.
 
ABC 17 talked with police and found out local drag racing has gotten worse in recent years, showing up in two main problem areas, Lemone Industrial and the Business Loop.
Police tell me the races usually go on over the weekends into the early morning hours, and complaints from both anonymous callers and overnight workers have increased over the last three years.
"At Lamone, we've gotten calls from businesses over there that crowds are starting to gather and then usually two or maybe four cars are set up to race down that stretch," said Sergeant Chris Kelley with the Columbia Police Department.
 
Henry Liu owns a business in the area. He says he's seen it for himself three times in the last six months in broad daylight.
"When I come in on Sunday usually, I see people drag racing down the street on Maguire and I wasn't too happy," said Liu. And he says they're often going pretty fast, close to 60 miles an hour.
Police tell us the Business Loop is the second spot racers like to go.
"Usually up at a stoplight, neck and neck, parallel to each other and the light turns green and they accelerate. There's danger to the community at large and to individuals racing up and down the roadway," said Kelley.
 
So I asked what's getting done to stop it at each popular place.
"We try to suppress it by trying to get someone out there and in addition having our traffic unit go out there and set up special operations of enforcement," replied Kelley.
Police tell us it's usually 16-18 year-olds drag racing in these areas, but as we saw this weekend, there are some older people getting involved. And we learned many of the cars are even decked out with nitrous oxide for higher speeds.
Police encourage anyone who knows where a street race will happen, to call Crimestoppers at 875-TIPS.

2265
Military Opinion / Govt. to announce 3-month cut in combat tours
« on: April 06, 2008, 10:32:56 PM »
The Associated Press has learned that the Bush administration plans to announce next week that U.S. soldiers' combat tours will be reduced from 15 months to 12 months beginning later this summer.

The decision is expected to get final, formal approval in the coming days. And it comes as Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, prepares to deliver a progress report to Congress next week on the improved security situation in Iraq.

A senior administration official told the AP on Friday about the plans. The official spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of the announcement.

2266
World News / Raucous UK Protests Greet Olympic Flame
« on: April 06, 2008, 10:24:45 PM »
Anti-China Protesters Grab, Block, Almost Snuff Olympic Flame in Chaotic London Relay
Demonstrators grabbed at the Olympic torch, blocked its path and tried to snuff out its flame Sunday in raucous protests of China's human rights record that forced a string of last-second changes to a chaotic relay through London.
The biggest protests since last month's torch-lighting in Greece tarnished China's hope for a harmonious prelude to a Summer Games celebrating its rise as a global power. Instead, the flame's 85,000-mile journey from Greece to Beijing has become a stage for activists decrying China's recent crackdown on Tibetans and support for Sudan despite civilian deaths in Darfur.
Demonstrators attempted to board the bus trailing the torch shortly after British five-time gold medal rower Steve Redgrave started the relay at Wembley Stadium.
Less than an hour later, a protester slipped through a tight police cordon and gripped the torch before he was thrown to the ground and arrested.

2267
State News / All-Time Low Turnout Expected for Tuesday Election
« on: April 06, 2008, 10:19:41 PM »
Low voter turnout is expected for Tuesday's election.

In fact, it’s expected to be close to an all-new low for April voting, at least in Greene County.

Saturday, only a few people showed up at the old courthouse to place an absentee ballot--that's just one sign that turnout could be low.

The Greene County clerk says that the average for an April election is 20-percent turnout. He's expecting just half that for Tuesday. The all-tine low was set in 1993, with just 9.3 percent turnout.

2268
State News / Volunteers Fight New Child Abuse Trend
« on: April 06, 2008, 10:17:02 PM »
Nineteen new volunteers will be the voice of abused and neglected children. The CASA or Court Appointed Special Advocates graduated from training on Friday. All 19 volunteers will assist abused and neglected children through the court process and foster care system.

Organizers say volunteers are even more important due to a disturbing new trend. CASA public affairs coordinator Dan Prater says, “More and more young children under the age of one are entering our system.” He says most of the children are abandoned or neglected by parents addicted to drugs. A national study says 1 in 50 infants in the United States have been neglected or abused.

Carol Holleyman and her husband are new volunteers. Holleyman says, “It’s incredible what’s happening to children. Their parents focus so much on getting drugs that the children fall victim. Holleyman says besides abuse these children are not fed or educated.

CASA is in constant need of volunteers. Organizers say volunteers will train for ten weeks before they start helping children. They say it takes just 8 hours a month to make a difference.

For more information you can call CASA at 875-7413 or go to www.casa.swmo.org

2269
State News / Tough Time Finding a Job
« on: April 06, 2008, 10:13:09 PM »
There's some good news in the job market.
If you were to go to the Missouri Career Center, you'd find new jobs being posted every day.
But, with more and more people being laid off, the competition for these jobs is getting pretty tough.

Sherry Stacy has spent the past year refining her resume and with a little help from the Missouri Career Center, she's found some work.

"There's not much out there,” says Stacy. “I know a lot of people that are barely making it.”

Stacy is making it, but before last June she was doing a lot better.
That’s because for awhile, she had been running her own house cleaning business.

"I thought I wasn't making as much, but I guess I was compared to now,” says Stacy.

She shut down her business because it became too hard to run it alone.
Now, like a lot of Americans, she's looking for something new.

"Not quite as many (jobs) available,” says Will Dowling with the Missouri Career Center. “It's becoming more competition especially for good paying jobs.”

Dowling says the career center is busier, with people even lined up outside when the center opens each morning.
And, it's not just the unemployed looking for work.


One example can be seen with part-time jobs. It used to be that some people would find a second job during the holidays, just to put even more toys in their cart.
Now that second job is no longer a holiday tradition.

"What we've noticed now is people either are keeping those jobs or looking for a part-time job now,” says Dowling.

And with all the competition, it makes finding just one job harder for people like Stacy.

"Right now, (I’m looking for) just something to have money coming in,” says Stacy.

According to the career center... The unemployment rate in Greene County is lower than that of the state as a whole.
But, if you are searching for work, the career center has set up help websites with local job postings

2270
Some recent headlines could lead you to think the military is in trouble.

In February, a mother at Fort Leonard Wood starved her infant daughter to death.

Just last month, an army recruiter shot and killed her retired army husband just north of the post.

But Fort Leonard Wood is providing programs to prevent tragedies like these.

The help is there, but service members have take advantage of it.

"You need to know what to do and who can help you in your time of need," says Usa Iverson, a military wife.

She has conquered both—the what to do and who can help—while her military husband is deployed overseas.

"The first thing I did when I got here was check out ACS. I wanted to see what they are offering. I took care team training, ready training, army family team building. You empower yourself, knowledge is power," says Iverson.

Iverson is a knowledgeable veteran, but not a combat veteran. She's a veteran at managing her household minus a major player-- her husband--who has moved all over the world with the army.

When she needs support, she turns to ACS or Army Community Services.

"We have employment readiness, relocation readiness, financial readiness," says Nancy Starnes of Child and Youth Services.

And they have more classes that teach those skills than ever before.

Last October the army reaffirmed its commitment to military families all over the world. The Army Family Covenant Initiative was signed here at Fort Leonard Wood. It added programs, plus made them more affordable, and more available for soldiers and the people who love them.

"We have 33 childcare providers and those ladies are certified to care for children in their homes," says Starnes.

There are programs for new and experienced parents, and free daycare centers on the post.

"The whole goal is prevention."

So military and family life consultants or counselors are always available to soldiers and their families, by phone or in person.

Their philosophy is the army life is a family life, and they want to make it a good life, too.

You do not have to have been deployed to take advantage of the programs offered there.

You do not have to live at Ft. Leonard Wood. Being in the military qualifies you for help.

From anywhere in the state, the army can set up service members and their families with classes and counselors in their area.

To find the program that meets your needs, call the Army Service Center at Fort Leonard Wood at 573-596-0212.

2271
Crime Stopper / Re: Aluminum Thieves
« on: April 06, 2008, 07:31:55 PM »
I had three large garbage bags of Aluminum cans stolen along with two five gallon gas tanks filled with gas last week.
At least they left my riding mower and the kids dune buggies alone. They must be small time crooks. I despise theives, and liars.

2272
I hear that French ships have been targeted by pirates because they are quick to surrender. &^&&( !!!@#$%^

2273
What are you looking for? / Re: 55 gallon metal barrels/trash cans
« on: April 06, 2008, 04:52:26 PM »
Orchelins (sp?) used to sell some, you might give them a call.

2274
Business Opinion / Re: Buckhorn Meat and Grocery.
« on: April 05, 2008, 08:02:54 PM »
I picked this up yesterday.

[attachment deleted by admin]

2275
National News / New Evidence of Earliest North Americans
« on: April 05, 2008, 06:32:08 PM »
WASHINGTON (AP) -- New evidence shows humans lived in North America more than 14,000 years ago, 1,000 years earlier than had previously been known. Discovered in a cave in Oregon, fossil feces yielded DNA indicating these early residents were related to people living in Siberia and East Asia, according to a report in Thursday's online edition of the journal Science."This is the first time we have been able to get dates that are undeniably human, and they are 1,000 years before Clovis," said Dennis L. Jenkins, a University of Oregon archaeologist, referring to the Clovis culture, well known for its unique spear-points that have been studied previously.Humans are widely believed to have arrived in North America from Asia over a land-bridge between Alaska and Siberia during a warmer period. A variety of dates has been proposed and some are in dispute.Few artifacts were found in the cave, leading Jenkins to speculate that these people stayed there only a few days at a time before moving on, perhaps following game animals or looking for other food.The petrified poop - coprolites to scientists - is yielding a look at the diet of these ancient Americans, Jenkins said.While the analysis is not yet complete, he said there are bones of squirrels, bison hair, fish scales, protein from birds and dogs and the remains of plants such as grass and sunflowers.The oldest of several coprolites studied is 14,340 calendar years old, said co-author Eske Willerslev, director of the Centre for Ancient Genetics at Denmark's University of Copenhagen."The Paisley Cave material represents, to the best of my knowledge, the oldest human DNA obtained from the Americas," he said. "Other pre-Clovis sites have been claimed, but no human DNA has been obtained."The date for the new coprolites is similar to that of Monte Verde in southern Chile, where human artifacts have been discovered, added Willerslev.Jenkins said it isn't clear exactly who these people living in the Oregon caves were, since there were few artifacts found. He said there was one stone tool, a hand tool used perhaps to polish or grind or mash bones or fat."We are not saying that these people were of a particular ethnic group. At this point, we know they most likely came from Siberia or Eastern Asia, and we know something about what they were eating, which is something we can learn from coprolites. We're talking about human signature," he said."If you are looking for the first people in North America, you are going to have to step back more than 1,000 years beyond Clovis to find them," Jenkins said.The Clovis culture has been dated to between 13,200 and 12,900 calendar years ago and is best known by the tools left behind.Michael Waters, director of the Center for the Study of the First Americans at Texas A&M University, said the find, along with indications of human presence at other locations, adds to the evidence for a pre-Clovis human presence in North America."The genetic evidence from the coprolites from Paisley Caves is also consistent with the current genetic data for the peopling of the Americas - that the earliest inhabitants of the Americas came from Northeast Asia," added Waters, who was not part of the research team.Anthropologist Ripan Malhi of the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, said this data along with material from Alaska provide increasing "evidence that ancestors of Native Americans used a coastal route during the colonization of the Americas." Malhi was not part of the research team.Jenkins said that discoveries like those in the Oregon caves "help us to reconstruct the American past.""Our heritage is really important and it is important to the majority of the American public. If you don't know where you come from, it's hard to have a feeling of community, of participation."To make sure the Oregon cave material hadn't been contaminated with modern DNA, the researchers tested more than 50 people who worked at the site. The DNA testing indicated that the feces belonged to Native Americans in two groups that can be traced to Siberia and East Asia.In their paper the researchers dated the coprolites at 12,300 "carbon years" before the present. Prior to 3,000 years ago, carbon years differed from calendar years, resulting in the date of approximately 14,300 calendar years for the coprolites.The research was funded by the Museum of Natural and Cultural History, University of Oregon; Association of Oregon Archaeologists and the Marie Curie Actions program.

2276
National News / Re: 52 Girls Removed From Texas Compound
« on: April 05, 2008, 05:55:44 PM »
Nearly 200 Taken From Texas Compound

ELDORADO, Texas (AP) -- Child welfare officials have now removed nearly 200 women and children from a secretive West Texas religious retreat built by polygamist leader Warren Jeffs, authorities said Saturday.

The investigation began after a 16-year-old living there complained of physical abuse. A search warrant authorized state troopers to enter the retreat run by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and look for evidence of a marriage between the girl and a 50-year-old man.

The warrant said the girl had a baby eight months ago, when she was 15.

State Child Protective Services on Friday removed 52 girls from the compound. Marleigh Meisner, a spokeswoman for the agency, said that another 131 residents were removed overnight and that by Saturday afternoon 137 children and 46 women were being housed and interviewed.

"They seem to be doing fine," Meisner said. Four investigators remained inside the polygamist compound looking for additional children.

The whereabouts of the young mother who sparked the investigation are unknown, Meisner said.

State troopers who raided the religious retreat were looking for the girl, her baby girl and 50-year-old Dale Barlow. Under Texas law, girls younger than 16 cannot marry, even with parental approval.

Barlow had not been found by Friday night, officials said then. They declined to comment Saturday, saying a state judge had issued a gag order.

The search warrant instructed officers to look for marriage records or other evidence linking the girl to Barlow and the baby. The warrant authorized the seizure of computer drives, CDs, DVDs or photos.

Those inside the retreat did not respond to requests for comment.

The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints broke away from the Mormon church after the latter disavowed polygamy more than a century ago.

State law enforcers declined to comment Saturday, saying a judge had issued a gag order, and the local sheriff did not return calls.

The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints broke away from the Mormon church after the latter disavowed polygamy more than a century ago.

The compound sits down a narrow paved road and behind a hill that shields it almost entirely from view in town. Only the 80-foot-high gleaming white temple can be seen on the horizon. Authorities blocked access to the gate, keeping onlookers miles away.

The 1,700-acre property had been an exotic game ranch. It is surrounded by dusty, wind-swept land where sheep are raised and mohair produced.

Eldorado (pronounced el-dor-AY'-do) is a two-stoplight town of fewer than 2,000 people nearly 200 miles northwest of San Antonio. It consists of a cluster of government buildings, a couple of churches and a few blocks of houses.

State officials said they did not know how many people lived at the retreat, although local officials estimated about 150 two years ago.

The group, known by the acronym FLDS, has been led by Jeffs since his father died in 2002. In November, Jeffs was sentenced to two consecutive sentences of five years to life in prison in Utah for being an accomplice to the rape of a 14-year-old girl who wed her cousin in an arranged marriage in 2001.

In Arizona, Jeffs is charged as an accomplice with four counts each of incest and sexual conduct with a minor stemming from two arranged marriages between teenage girls and their older male relatives. He is jailed in Kingman, Ariz., awaiting trial.

The San Angelo Standard-Times reported that children were being kept at a community center and a Baptist church in Eldorado.

The owner of the Sutton County Steak House in nearby Sonora fed the children dinner on Friday and breakfast on Saturday, owner Linda Love told The San Angelo Standard-Times.

"They're singing songs. So happy and sweet and precious. It's heart-breaking," Love said.


2277
I do not envy you, that is hard work. It sounds like you deserve a nice soak in a nice hot bath.

2278
Any support? Good one.  !!!@#$%^ !!!@#$%^ &^&&(

2279
State News / Plant closing announcement stuns 300 people in Camdenton
« on: April 05, 2008, 05:13:05 PM »
CAMDENTON, Mo. -- The ripple effect of the downturn in the national economy was felt here in the Ozarks again. Earlier this week, about 780 Willow Brook Foods’ employees in Springfield learned they would lose their jobs or have to transfer. Now, Modine Manufacturing’s 300 employees here learned similar devastating news.Modine makes all kinds of parts for heating and cooling technology and industrial equipment. Modine plans to phase out those jobs in the next one-and-a-half to two years. It’s tough news to hear for those 300 people and for the city itself.
"We were told yesterday morning to report to the cafeteria at 9:30,” Modine employee Betty Rogers said Friday.
Since then, it's been nothing but heartache.
"We’ve got years, got families, car payment, house payment, just like everyone else,” said Rogers.
As Rogers spent much of her life behind the plant walls, she never thought she'd be like the people on whom she saw news reports.
"For the last five to seven years, you always hear on TV that plants are shutting down, but you think, ‘Yea! I've got a job.’ But it comes home to you,” she said.
Both Carolyn Burns and Sharon Grim couldn't believe the news. Now they're looking toward retirement sooner than they thought they'd be.
"Not so much for me because I'm ready to retire, but we got a lot of young people here,” said Burns.
A company spokeswoman in Wisconsin says some employees getting laid off may have a chance to transfer to another Modine property out of state. However, some employees here are skeptical that any of them will get transfers.
The city's Chamber of Commerce is trying to put a good light on this.
"Kind of the flip side to this is we've got 300 skilled people that would be an attractive opportunity for other businesses,” said Bruce Mitchell, executive director of the chamber. "We'll be looking at what we can do to attract businesses that might be able to take advantage of that labor pool."
It’s a labor pool that was still stunned on Friday.
"We heard rumors about it but didn't think it'd come true,” said Grim.
Employees there have no word on who will get a severance package, or how much it will be. They're also skeptical that the plant might stay open for as long as two years.
Modine’s corporate office declined to have someone speak on camera or in a telephone interview. However, it did send a statement.
"As a result of our global restructuring plan, we expect to achieve $20 million to $25 million in annual savings.
"We remain focused on treating the affected employees with respect and fairness."

2280
National News / Re: Pregnant Man
« on: April 05, 2008, 04:44:36 PM »
I thought there was a thread about this already....

Portal

Boards

Devils Elbow

Attractions

Sports

St. Robert

Waynesville

PC Daily

Dixon

Menu Guide

Fun Links

Homework

Crocker

Fort Wood

Swedeborg

Big Piney

Laquey

PCW Home

Restaurants

Richland

Fort Wood.net