YES
Jul. 19th, 2008 | 01:21 pm
posted by:
urzafailure

From here
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A MUST SEE! especially for the boys! (from giapeps)
Jul. 18th, 2008 | 01:37 am
posted by:
stepbacksniper
http://www.tatuagemdaboa.com.br/
Wait for the dancing sexy girl to fully load :P
Type your first name in the first box
Then your last name on the second box
skip the email add and stuff
click on visualizar
ENJOY :D
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In Memoriam
Jul. 17th, 2008 | 09:54 pm
posted by:
12executives

Fr. Santos Mena, S.J.
1929 - 2008
While most people knew Fr. Mena as the backroom administrator of XS, my best memory I had of him was that he was part of my DWTL experience back in H3 and H4. He was one of the principal supporters of the Days, always sparing time to help out his best bud, Fr. Cortina in putting together these events. During my DWTL, he was the priest I was assigned to for the "confession of the century". We then spent the entire afternoon chatting and talking casually as if it wasn't the Sacrament of Reconciliation but rather like a regular conversation. The light atmosphere sort of contrasted the heavy gravity of the Days experience and he helped a lot in coming to terms with what it all meant. Several Days batches later, he was the celebrant of the send-off mass of the Days I staffed in. He was however, filling in for an already ill Fr. Cortina. Even with all the work he had in running whatever institution he was in, he always spared time for what mattered most and did it with a big smile on his face. I bet that somewhere in heaven, he's chugging down some beer along with Fr. Cortina, Fr. Papilla, Fr. Desautel and the other Jesuits who came to Xavier.
Thanks you and rest in peace.
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Overtime at work.
Jul. 17th, 2008 | 07:18 am
posted by:
sarah_mercado
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Wise Words From The Living Shadow And A Mentor
Jul. 16th, 2008 | 10:37 am
music: Gotham Knight
posted by:
kiddisaster
Cassandra: But it can be put in its place
Bruce Wayne: That place is where pain can work for you
Cassandra: Pain doesn't work for you. You work through pain.
- Working Through Pain, Gotham Knight (2008)
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My Father Mena (and Father Cortina is in it too) Story
Jul. 16th, 2008 | 09:02 pm
posted by:
urzafailure
I was a fourth year Xavier School student. This must have been around the quarterly exams of the first quarter or around that time. I was having lunch at Dulcinea (Megamall branch) with my mom and my sister when Fr. Mena and Fr. Cortina came in and ordered lunch.
Now, Fr. Cortina taught my dad when my dad was a student at Xavier, and Fr. Mena was the parish priest who presided over mass at 9am, our former regular mass time on Sundays at Mary the Queen, so my mom called over the waitress and told her that we would be paying for their food.
Aside: whenever my mom tells this story, or hears my tell it, she always likes to point out the significance of Dulcinea, since it serves Spanish food, she figures that the priests are fond of it because they all came from Spain.
Anyway, when the priests were done with their meal, they called for the check, and were surprised to hear that someone had paid for them already. The waitress pointed to our table and said that we had paid for their food, so they came over to thank us.
I'm not sure who it was who asked me the question, I think it was Fr. Cortina, since I had had a very heartfelt conversation with him during Days with the Lord, but one of them asked me where I wanted to go for college.
I answered, "The Ateneo."
They both laughed and said that they (since they were both Jesuits) would do their best to make sure that I would get in.
That was, and I'm 99% positive on this, the last time I ever saw either of the two priests. Fr. Cortina passed away a few months later, and Fr. Mena stopped presiding over regular Sunday morning mass.
In the February of the year after that, I got accepted into the Ateneo.
Fr. Mena, based on what I heard, transferred to a job in the Xavier Archives. He would write a book about the school's early years, but then he fell in and had to go back to Spain.
Fr. Mena passed away last Tuesday in Spain.
I never got to thank either of them for helping me get into the Ateneo (harhar).

Rest in peace.
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Shhhh!
Jul. 16th, 2008 | 07:09 pm
posted by:
urzafailure

While almost all the ICAns I know are tripping over the Sweet Valley High LJ Community, my nice find of the week has been this Fandom Post Secret LJ Community.
Because all the "I'd hit that," "Hating yaoi is not a gender attack," and "Most embarassing OTP" posts are plain silly.
And sometimes there are melancholy bits like the attached pic.
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Night Shift
Jul. 16th, 2008 | 02:21 pm
posted by:
sarah_mercado
Food, I'm still not sure what time I should be eating ~__~ I'm pretty sure dinner is about the same time but lunch time is around 2am and breakfast..well if I wake up sometime between 10am-6pm I guess you can call it that. The third shift is definitely the "chat shift." I miss the 2nd shift. I also kinda miss being on solo shift. I got used to working alone that I tend to work on hyper mode all the time (hyper - doing things in a fast pace to keep up with all the incoming work). Gah. I think it's about time I got back to sleep. G'nyt :)
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"Are You Gonna Fix It, Fix It, Fix It?": An Unorganized Organized Entry from My Unorganized Organize
Jul. 15th, 2008 | 05:54 pm
posted by:
glam_jess
"With God's help, transformation doesn't begin with boycotts or ad campaigns. It begins with people who care so much about building forts that they'll use whatever they have, even if it's ribbons and a pile of sticks, to get the job done. Action bears fruit when people faithfully stay at the task until results happen. The challenge is not to change the world. The challenge is to act in obedience to the Savior, spreading the amazing truth He has entrusted to us, each and every day of our lives."
Man's course is not within his choice,
nor is it for him to direct his step.
Prayer of Jeremiah
Jer 11:23
Even with free will in the picture, I always imagined life as a bigger-scaled "Choose Your Own Adventure" book with God's will still prevailing, His plan for us gracefully unfolding in His time no matter which adventure we chose.
Note my go-getter/control obssessed/assertive/aggressive/worry-war
Darling, no matter what your head says or what your heart chooses to believe, God will always fix it in His time.
I am He, I am He who will sustain you.
I have made you and I will carry you;
I will sustain you and I will rescue you.
(What is the operational word in this verse?)
Ask, Believe, Receive. I asked, believed, and received. My sequence is jumbled up now: I'm asking and receiving, alright, all I have to do now is believe.
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Building Forts, Sandcastles, and Castles in the Air: Are You Gonna Fix It,?
Jul. 15th, 2008 | 05:20 pm
posted by:
glam_jess
Man's course is not within his choice,
nor is it for him to direct his step.
Prayer of Jeremiah
Jer 11:23
Even with free will in the picture, I always imagined life as a bigger-scaled "Choose Your Own Adventure" book with God's will still prevailing no matter which adventure we chose.
<a href="http://www.beautyfromtheheart.org/2
Read more on The Challenge: Building Forts with Ribbons</a>
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Lemme just say...
Jul. 16th, 2008 | 01:11 am
posted by:
stepbacksniper
Hotness.
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Gilbert Arenas promotes the Philippines to his fellow ballas!
Jul. 15th, 2008 | 01:04 pm
posted by:
stepbacksniper
http://my.nba.com/thread.jspa?threadID=5
Manila
Then we stopped in Manila. It was a different world. I’ve never seen fans like that in my life. These pictures can’t even do justice to what was going on out there. I had a reception at a small, little venue to welcome me to the city and there were 200 people there.
One thing I want to say about Filipinos: they’re very warm people, very good-hearted people. Like, everybody was nice. You know, you meet nice people, but a whole country of nice, genuine, warm-hearted people was unbelievable. These are diehard fans.
I really didn’t know if I was in Game 7 of a playoff series, I couldn’t tell the difference. Everywhere I went it was just bananas.
I also want to give a shout out to my man from Maryland who flew from MD to the Philippines and told me the reason he flew all the way out there was to get autographs from me because he knew I was going to be there at that date and time.
I did a couple mall tours. I also helped a kid with his wish. It was in one of the poverty areas in Manila and there’s a group called GK that builds homes for people all over the world. They helped this community out by putting people in homes. I guess a couple weeks before we got there, a hurricane hit and destroyed their community and GK helped build it back up.
One little kid who lived there wanted a basketball court for his community so all the kids could play so I donated – with the help of GK and adidas – a basketball court to that community and the kid was very happy.
You have to look at the Agent Zero posters they had out there. They put me in a cape at one of my last events in Manila. It was at one of their biggest malls and they were predicting it was going to be crowded. I mean, crowded to me is a Saturday afternoon at the mall where you have to wait in line for 10 minutes to pay for your jeans. Their crowded was probably four or five thousand people in the mall. It was like nothing I’ve ever seen before, and I’ve seen crazy fans all over the world. It was like Golden State against the Dallas Mavericks with Game 3 back in Oakland. It was that type of atmosphere in the mall.
I was stunned.
They made me feel like an NBA star.
Any NBA players out there: If you’re having a bad day, or you’re having a bad career, go to Manila. They’ll bring your spirits up, trust me.
I felt like I just won the NBA championship, to be for real.
After we left the mall we were looking at pictures from the event a couple days later and we were telling ourselves, "Man, that was unreal!"
Plus, with the security I had, I felt like I was the President. I felt like I was Obama. I really felt like I was running in the presidential election, especially when I got to meet the U.S. ambassador out in the Philippines. We had a great time talking to each other.
We actually went to a college basketball game together. Their college game would be like if it was Duke and Maryland playing each other and you split the crowd in half, 50-50. One side of their gym was blue and one side of their gym was green and everybody was just yelling.
Backstage I met Manny Pacquiao, he’s the town hero. I have to be honest, they made me feel even bigger than him at the moment. I talked to him and he invited me to his November fight, so if I have time and depending on if we have a day off, I might go see that. Oh, I also met Jet Li in Shanghai, can’t leave him out.
On top of everything else in Manila, I stayed at the best hotel I’ve ever stayed at – The Peninsula. I was in the mack daddy “El Presidente” suite and was like the Fresh Prince with Geoffrey – I had a live-in butler.
One more note on Manila, just so you guys can get a picture of what kind of people they are and how much they adore and love entertainers and the NBA. Think about this: If you’ve ever been to a Beyoncé concert, or anybody’s concert in the states really, if they sell out an arena it will be 20,000 fans. Last year in Beyoncé’s hometown, Houston, she pulled in 12,000 people to her show. D.C. was her biggest sell, she put 18,000 people in the seats. Meanwhile, she was in Manila for two days to do two concerts and she had 85,000 people, two nights straight.
She couldn’t even do it in the arena, she had to do it on the lawn. Like, “Everybody, y’all just get in the grass, I’m going to perform.”
That’s how the people are out there.
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UAAP Power Rankings: Week 2
Jul. 15th, 2008 | 09:47 am
posted by:
urzafailure
#1 ADMU
Season record: 3-0 (27 point win over AdU, 6 point win over UE)
Previous rank: 1
The only undefeated team left in the league; they've beaten the two toughest teams in the UAAP (by my estimation) so there's a good chance that they will sweep the first round of eliminations. Ryan Buenafe has quietly shown why he was in such high demand, not only scoring but setting up teammates as well. Also, aside from a lackluster performance in the Adamson game, Rabah Al-Hussaini has shown that he is a more than adequate replacement for Ford Arao. They will need to make more outside shots though, if they intend on keeping this win streak alive for as long as they can.
#2 UE
Season record: 2-1 (11 point win over NU, 6 point loss to ADMU)
Previous rank: 2
The Red Warriors are sorely missing the deep bench they had last season. As it is now, the guys coming off the bench provide energy, but not enough scoring to handle bad outings by their starters. Pari Llagas, in particular, is not giving them the numbers he was producing in the summer leagues, putting too much pressure on the human pogo stick, Elmer Espiritu. Starting small forward Gino Etrone is an even bigger non-factor for them. Compounding the problem is an injury to Paul Lee, although rookie Paul Zamar has been a revelation for them.
#3 DLSU
Season record: 1-1 (11 point win over FEU)
Previous rank: 5
La Salle made sure it avoided a 0-2 hole, pulling out a win against FEU. While the come from behind victory is good, the fact that this team has basically become "Jvee Casio and four random slobs" is not. La Salle could use production from their center position, because Rico Maierhofer is settling for outside jumpers, and a more consistent effort from Simon Atkins at the point, although he did show flashes of brilliance against the Tamaraws.
#4 UST
Season record: 1-1 (19 point win over UP)
Previous rank: 7
The long-armed athletes also known as the Growling Tigers were able to outhustle and outshoot the Fighting Maroons. They were able to do so even though Jervy Cruz was playing injured, a good sign for the team (aside: one wonders whether Cruz over-exerted himself in the previous week's game against UE, when his teammates were NOT helping him). They also discovered that rookie floor general Jeric Fortuna can hit big three's, making him an excellent compliment to Japs Cuan, and a great point guard in training for next season.
#5 FEU
Season record: 1-1 (11 point loss to DLSU)
Previous rank: 3
For all the talk of maturity and poise on this team bannered mainly by sophomores, FEU cracked under La Salle's pressure and coughed up a game that was within reach. Although they were able to both execute in a half-court set up and run the floor, they have fits when it's the opponent's turn to run the ball back at them. Rookie Robert Kave has the potential to be a shot blocker in him, but it's too little to properly protect the post.
#6 UP
Season record: 1-1 (19 point loss to UST)
Previous rank: 4
All aspirations for a 2-0 start were dashed by a UST team that was looking for their first win. The bad thing about the loss was that it couldn't be blamed on Jervy Cruz, who looked mortal hobbling around. Instead, the Fighting Maroons did not fight. They did not fight for rebounds, they did not fight after UST got the lead in the second quarter, and they executed sloppily. Toss in the fact that Mike Gamboa and Martin Reyes both had off-games and it's easy to see why they lost.
#7 AdU
Season record: 1-2 (27 point loss to ADMU, 8 point win over NU)
Previous rank: 6
After the biggest shellacking in the season so far, Adamson was able to clinch its first win against the underperforming Bulldogs. The Falcons sorely wish they could have the 22-11 Michael Gallinato from their first game back, but he hasn't reappeared ever since. Instead, they've turned to outside shooting to win them games, a perfectly valid, but risky tactic. The sooner Gallinato regains his form, the better, to combine with growth from the veteran (but oft-injured) forward Marc Agustin and second-year point guard Jerick Canada.
#8 NU
Season record: 0-3 (11 point loss to UE, 8 point loss to AdU)
Previous rank: 8
The league's new whipping boys can at least take comfort in the fact that their losses have not been as lopsided as UP's were last season. Edwin Asoro has come back from his awful performance in their opener against UP, but he desperately needs some help from his teammates. Raymond Aguilar, the heir apparent to the King Bulldog position, has been okay, but he gets into foul trouble too easily.
Week 2 Standout Team
C - Rabah Al-Hussaini (18 points, 17 rebounds, 3 assists versus UE)
PF - Elmer Espiritu (11 points, 12 rebounds, 4 assists, 3 blocks versus NU)
SF - Marc Agustin (25 points, 3 rebounds versus NU)
SG - Jvee Casio (29 points, 8 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 block, 3 steals versus FEU)
PG - Japs Cuan (9 points, 9 rebounds, 7 assists, 1 steal versus UP)
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Before the shut-eye.
Jul. 14th, 2008 | 02:03 pm
posted by:
kiddisaster
I know the least and yet in some way, I feel that I can understand more than you do but it doesn't make me any better than you. In fact it all makes me feel much worse than I do now. Knowing that I cannot do anything about it and you can do more, yet you still don't seem to hit it right. Maybe you can, maybe you are but it isn't enough.
I can only walk up until the clear glass that is placed not by you but for you and merely witness. If I shatter it, I hurt all of us.
It pains me for I am unnecessarily hurt and offended.
I have become unnecessarily judgmental.
I feel the unnecessary emotion of feeling unnecessary.
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Mas madali ba...
Jul. 13th, 2008 | 12:10 pm
posted by:
kiddisaster
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THE BASKETBLOG: THE BIG, BAD, BLUE - Ateneo 64 – UE 58
Jul. 13th, 2008 | 10:38 am
posted by:
stepbacksniper
History might have been in the making this afternoon.
The late 80’s was the era of the silky-smooth Ateneo great Danny Francisco. At a very sinewy 6’6”, Francisco methodically dissected his defenders on the low block, using his pivot moves and his trademark left-handed sky hook, reminiscent of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. He was no patsie on the defensive end, you can ask Dindo Pumaren and the rest of the Green Archers of that era who lost their self-esteem after running into Francisco at Blue Eagle drive.
From the late 90’s until 2002, the league was owned by Enrico Villanueva. Now for us (sort of) young fans, Rico’s the very first face we can remember from that Hail Mary Squad that got it done in 2002. He was an absolute FORCE in the paint – at a hulking 6’5” he dished out a lot of punishment, ranging from bruised ribs because of his monster slams or bruised egos after he executes that wicked spin move for the hook shot. He was a beast.
It might have been four seasons too late, but Claiford Arao made his swan song one for the ages, powering the Season 70 Eagles to a 3rd place finish behind his deceptive post play. Lumbering he may be, but Ford did just enough to be our inside presence last year. Oh, and the guy was an enforcer as well, displaying enough moxie to stand toe-to-toe with the goo… eherm, big men from the opposition. Ford was the big man on campus and our trip with Air Ford Airlines was a memorable one.
And now, in his second-to-the-last season, current Ateneo big man Rabeh Al-Hussaini is fighting to prove a point.
After struggling mightily against the human pogo sticks that compose the UE frontline, Rabeh gathered just enough steam to deliver a second half performance that must have made Ford Arao smile from his seat, a showing that made a statement about this kid’s desire.
He’s not going to play second fiddle to Nonoy Baclao, or sidekick to Chris Tiu.
This kid wants to be The Man.
The Big Bad… RABS?
A headcase. Too soft inside. Easily gets distracted. Not playing to his size.
These are some of the widely-held criticisms about Rabeh. I’d like to think they’re constructive and are just being said to somehow let the fans voices heard that they believe Rabeh can be so much more.
I won’t even front. I admit to having my extreme cursing episodes every time the kid launches an ill-advised jumper or when he often forgets to box out and bend his legs to jump for those rebounds. Today though, my cursing was to a different tune. I wasn’t cussing to the high heavens because of some botched lay-up or a turnover. It was more like:
What the f*ck is going on? Why is Rabeh DOMINATING?!?
No f*ckin way. This can’t be the guy I’ve seen for four years fumble tight passes in the paint. This can’t be the center I’ve seen get pwned by players half his size. This cannot be the guy who is an automatic foul or turnover whenever he tries to create a shot.
But there he was. He was jumping and hustling and shooting and banging and fighting in the paint. No longer was I seeing the kid who sulks whenever the coaches gave him a tongue lashing. He looked different from the kid who looked like he got busted whenever his teammates didn’t give him the ball.
Rabeh’s head was in the game. He didn’t stick his lower lip out, he didn’t scratch his head, and he didn’t even curse the referees to the high heavens when calls didn’t go his way.
Yeah I know. Game’s leading scorer at 18, game’s leading rebounder with a monster 17-rebound effort.
18 pts, 17 rbs, 3 assts.
F*cking unbelievable
Will the real Rabeh Al-Hussaini please stand up?!?
Ravishing Reds
Led by the dunking demon and resident cat-face Elmer Espiritu, the UE frontline may be small, but they can really jump out of the gym. Dindo Pumaren’s 3-guard line-up with Toto Bandaying, James Martinez, and “Hello Marcy” Arellano complements the high-flying frontline with impeccable outside shooting. Little boy Zamar (son of former UE coach Boysie) even chipped in and torched us from beyond area code with around 3 triples I think. The Pumaren press was also there, but for some reason the refs decided to call them bumps and mini hacks whenever they pressed.
Unfortunately for the Warriors though, the enigma know as the Norman Black coaching staff unleashed a different dimension today.
The Big Bad D
Most people would attribute this team’s wins to our offense, and why not? Chris Tiu has evolved into a more complete scorer, we have super rookies in Ryan Buenafe and Nico Salva, Rabeh, Noy, and Jobe form a three-headed monster inside, and the guards chip in when you need them to.
But after holding Adamson to 45 and UE today to 58, I dare say this Blue Eagle team is getting the wins because of good honest-to-goodness defense. Textbook, challenge the shot, stay in front of your man, limit them to one-shot opps, defense. We have ball hawks in Yuri Escueta and Eric Salamat, who destroyed UE’s self esteem when he picked Marcy’s pockets in broad daylight. We have a one-man swat team in Nonoy Baclao, ask Marcy (whoa again? He’s becoming our defense’s bi… er female dog :P) who was never the same after Noy swatted his reverse lay-up attempt. We have a brick wall when they run into our bigs Jobe, Nico, and Rabeh. Chris Tiu isn’t so bad defensively either.
Apparently, our Eagles listen whenever we yell “Get that ball!”
A game of RUNS
By runs, I mean:
RUNS – a trademark of the Pumaren kiddos, their boys love to push the ball. It’s zip, zip, zip everytime they get long rebounds.
And
RUNS – we race to a lead, they catch up, then they lead. Then we catch up, lead, and the process goes round and round until one team starts shooting bricks or makes some stops.
Both Ateneo and UE have this dirty habit of relying on spurts to either catch up or build leads. For both teams, if they want to keep racking up wins, their offense has to hum.
Oh, and play defense from start to finish. There’s no off day for good defense.
*The King James choice: Ryan Buenafe
After my boys Eric Salamat and Nico Salva punished Adamson last Thursday, this honor hoes to Ryan Buenafe for today’s game.
No he didn’t razzle and dazzle with his drives today, but man HE MADE SOME GREAT PASSES, particularly in the second half to a focused Rabeh Al-Hussaini.
The Battle of Katipunan coming up, Ateneo vs. UP.
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ADMU beats UE, 64-58 (July 13, 2008)
Jul. 13th, 2008 | 06:08 pm
posted by:
urzafailure
Thanks to everyone who stopped by, followed the coverage, and commented!
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Live Blogging: UE versus ADMU (July 13, 2008)
Jul. 13th, 2008 | 02:57 pm
posted by:
urzafailure
The actual game starts at 4:00pm though I will be pontificating a bit on the currently on-going AdU - NU tussle before then.
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At this point
Jul. 13th, 2008 | 11:18 am
mood:
frustrated
music: James Morrison- The Letter
posted by:
kiddisaster
The future has always been distant.
Now it also seems so impossible.
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Where no one can hear me.
Jul. 12th, 2008 | 01:54 pm
posted by:
kiddisaster
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
-flails-

