Sunday, May 31, 2009

FIRST DAY



Im kind of happy all this happen when I was a freshmanif not i would not be in this great life in school

FIRST DAY

http://www.littleextrasdiecuts.com/DieCuts/MyFreshmanYearWd.jpg

Friday, May 29, 2009

DID YOU KNOW


Singapore cancer patient was held for four hours by immigration officials in the United States when they could not detect his fingerprints -- which had apparently disappeared because of a drug he was taking.
The incident, highlighted in the Annals of Oncology, was reported by the patient's doctor, Tan Eng Huat, who advised cancer patients taking this drug to carry a doctor's letter when traveling to the United States.
The drug, capecitabine, is commonly used to treat cancers in the head and neck, breast, stomach and colorectum.
One side-effect is chronic inflammation of the palms or soles of the feet and the skin can peel, bleed and develop ulcers or blisters -- or what is known as hand-foot syndrome.
"This can give rise to eradication of fingerprints with time," explained Tan, senior consultant in the medical oncology department at Singapore's National Cancer Center.
The patient, a 62-year-old man, had head and neck cancer that had spread but responded well to chemotherapy. To prevent the cancer from recurring, he was put on capecitabine.
"In December 2008, after more than three years of capecitabine, he went to the United States to visit his relatives," Tan wrote.
"He was detained at the airport customs for four hours because the immigration officers could not detect his fingerprints. He was allowed to enter after the custom officers were satisfied that he was not a security threat."
Tan said the loss of fingerprints is not described in the packaging of the drug, although chronic inflammation of the palms and soles of feet is included.
"The topmost layer ... is the layer that accounts for the fingerprint, that (losing that top layer) is all it takes (to lose a fingerprint)," Tan told Reuters.
"Theoretically, if you stop the drug, it will grow back but details are scanty. No one knows the frequency of this occurrence among patients taking this drug and nobody knows how long a person must be on this drug before the loss of fingerprints."

ON MY OWN

I plan on moveing out and liiveing to myslef next year im moveing out to be a man i think

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

SUMMMMER BABY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


this summer im going to the Alps and going to go snow boarding with a couple of my friends for 4 weeks noting but snow cold air and steep slopes
.

Monday, May 18, 2009

GREEN LIGHTS FOR ALL


Brits are about to test the theory that removing traffic signals could help congestion. This is not being tested in St. Louis, but in London. The Times of London reports:

What would happen if traffic lights were suddenly switched off? Would there be gridlock or would the queues of frustrated drivers miraculously disappear?

People in London are about to find out the answer in Britain’s first test of the theory that removing lights will cure congestion.

For six months, lights at up to seven junctions in Ealing will be concealed by bags and drivers will be left to negotiate their way across by establishing eye contact with pedestrians and other motorists.

Ealing Council believes that, far from improving the flow of traffic, lights cause delays and may even increase road danger. Drivers race towards green lights to make it across before they turn red. Confidence that they have right of way lulls them into a false sense of security, meaning that they fail to anticipate hazards coming from the side. The council hopes that drivers will learn to co-operate, crossing junctions on a first-come first-served basis rather than obeying robotic signals that have no sense of where people are waiting.

IM GOOD AT ...........






Im really good at makeing people mad I can do it by drawing

It starts with a G....

Graffiti has a long and proud history. The subculture surrounding graffiti has existed for several decades, and it's still going strong. The graffiti artists (or "writers" as they prefer to call themselves) are passionate, skilled, community-oriented, and socially conscious in ways that profoundly contradict the way they've been portrayed as common criminals and vandals.
Yellow is not my color but i like it on walls it brings out the details in thing

IM ME





This is what I do its who I am

ART CRIME

This is the stuff boys are made of this is the reason why I break laws to show my name in public like I said this is my name and my spary can is my speaker

THE BEST DAY EVER


My first day of school was to one I will not forget I what happen out I was so happy my dad left leave my with kid my age to play with them and eat snacks and have nap time

Awwwwww nap the best thing that could happen to me in school

Thursday, May 14, 2009

IM GOOD @


Im good at getting in trouble with the police and happen to draw on walls and make people for some odd reason

Thursday, May 7, 2009

I SEE DIED PEOPLE

have attached a photo of an image that appeared on the stairway of a haunted old churchbuilding in Rialto, California. This building is the home of the Rialto Historical Society and I am thehistorian of the Historical Society. The photographer, Rich McInnis, did not see anything on thestairway when he snapped the photo. He was shocked to see the image after taking the film to aone-hour photo development service. A few days after this photo was taken, I was leading a tour ofelementary school students through the church.The sh**t is scary

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

CORN BREAD


Darryl McCray, referred to as "Cornbread", is a graffiti artist from Philadelphia, USA. Starting in 1967, he is regarded as "father of modern graffiti".He is also known for writing his name on an elephant at the Philadelphia Zoo and on the side of the Jackson 5's private jet His initial efforts in graffiti was based upon his love interest for a girl. This to me was the reason why I do graffiti this is why i write this is my name and my spary can is my speaker

Monday, May 4, 2009


In America around the late 1960s, graffiti was used as a form of expression by political activists, and also by gangs such as the Savage Skulls, La Familia, and Savage Nomads to mark territory.
As for myslef I use graffiti to relase builted up stress and angery I would like to paint the town red as I always say so everyone can see in a monocromatic tone.

Friday, May 1, 2009

BOOM


Back in February, Tamara Gillespie was mad at her husband, police say. After all, he had just taken all the money they had been saving for a new car and was headed to the Muckleshoot Casino in Auburn to gamble it away.
So she picked up her cellphone, dialed the casino and told them her husband was headed there with a fertilizer bomb to blow the place up, according to King County prosecutors.
Now Gillespie, 43, of Enumclaw, who has a history of causing problems at the tribal casino, has been charged in King County Superior Court with making a bomb threat, a felony. She has been summoned to arraignment May 7 in Kent and remains free.
When reached on her cellphone today, Gillespie laughed and denied making the call. "That's just ludicrous," she said. "That whole thing is just ridiculous."
According to the charging documents, a casino worker answered the main telephone line about 1 a.m. on Feb. 21 and was greeted by what sounded like a very alarmed woman.
The woman wouldn't give her name or her husband's name, but she was insistent that he was on his way to the casino with a bomb made from ammonia and fertilizer, intent on revenge for losing a lot of money.
The casino was unable to identify the phone number of the caller. Auburn police were alerted and security measures were stepped up, but there were no problems at the casino, the court papers say.
About a week later, police got a call from a friend of Gillespie, who said he was pretty sure she had made the bomb threat.
The man said he had been drinking with Gillespie and her husband, Brian, at their home that night when Brian Gillespie gathered up the couple's car money and left for the casino. His wife was upset that her husband would lose all the money, the witness said, so she grabbed her cellphone and appeared to make a call, according to the charging documents.
The witness said he heard Gillespie say something about ammonia and fertilizer, but at the time he thought she was just faking the call as a joke.
Police obtained Gillespie's cellphone records and found that Gillespie called directory assistance at 12:51 a.m. and then two minutes later called the casino, prosecutors allege.
When questioned, Gillespie told police she had lost her cellphone at the casino and imagined that someone else might have found it and made the threat, prosecutors allege. But she later said she took a lot of prescription medication and often doesn't remember things, so she might have made the call, according to the prosecution documents.



This afternoon, Gillespie repeated that she had lost her cellphone at the casino, where she and her husband go "a couple times a week." She said the first she learned of the bomb threat was when police showed up at her door.
She said she had been in a serious accident recently and takes a lot of medication, leading her to frequently lose her cellphone. She presumes someone might have found it and phoned the threat to the casino.
She said she wasn't worried about the charge. She was more upset that police had obtained her telephone records, "violating my civil rights and my privacy."
"I thought this was still a free country," she said.
Prosecutors say Gillespie, who is also known as Tamara Lapenckas, has been arrested at the casino for trespassing, assault and resisting arrest. In addition to those convictions, she has convictions for drugs, drunken driving and defrauding a public utility.