We'll...it's not unusual at all. As you defined from your post...he was dialing from outside his...well...rather...'their' point of presence.
In fact, if the chick in this case was unbelievably hot, we certainly would not have heard of this.
In an article posted on MenWeb, correspondent Barry Daniels interviewed Michael Burlingame, professor of history at Connecticut College and author of the book, The Inner World of Abraham Lincoln University of Illinois Press. Daniels notes: As Pokorski noted in his lengthy report, historians have long known that Lincoln's relationship with his wife, Mary, was sometimes tempestuous. But beyond that, Pokorski reported, the new book 'cites evidence that Mary was both physically and verbally abusive toward Lincoln' and that the marriage was 'so truly miserable' that 'Lincoln's desire to be away from Mary probably contributed to him becoming president'. Or, as author Burlingame more delicately puts it, had Lincoln married a more, uh, congenial wife, he might more likely 'have been satisfied with the modest emoluments of a country lawyer's practice' and contented himself 'in the delights of an inviting and happy home'. So I asked Burlingame, who put in 10 years researching his book, would it be fair to describe Lincoln as, in the language of today, a 'battered husband.' 'Well, yes, he was one,' replied Burlingame unhesitatingly. 'He was in a sense a victim of spousal abuse.' For instance, when the Lincoln's were residing in Springfield, in the old home that is now a shrine, one day Abe didn't put more wood on the fire soon enough to suit Mary, so she bopped him with a piece of firewood. 'The next day,' says Burlingames's book, Lincoln showed up for work 'with a plaster (bandage) covering his nose.' On another occasion, the meat Lincoln bought for breakfast wasn't what Mary wanted. Bam! She smacked him in the face and drew blood. The book also cites incidents, as noted above, in which Mary let old Abe have it with hot coffee, broomsticks, and fast-pitch potatoes. It got so bad that, according to the book, Lincoln, as a Springfield lawyer, kept a couch in the office where he often spent the night. He also took refuge on occasion with neighbors and friends. And being married to Mary and what the book calls her 'ungovernable temper' obviously didn't get any easier after Lincoln became president and had the Oval Office to hide out in. In 1864, with the Civil War still raging around him, the book recounts - by way of illustraqting how Lincoln viewed life and strife with Mary - an incident in which Lincoln pardoned a young Union soldier who had been sentenced to death for deserting the army to mary his sweetheart. As he signed the pardon, Lincoln commented in an aside to a witness that: 'I want to punish the young man. Probably in less than a year, he will wish I had withheld the pardon.'
WTMC when sax going to meet a girl tomoro and she ask him to bring a sample of his hair lol
Quote from: kiya on August 14, 2007, 10:22:24 PMWTMC when sax going to meet a girl tomoro and she ask him to bring a sample of his hair lolhey sax carefull they put a jumbie on you there boy!!!
yea he say he fraid someone put obea on him
- All the jumping puzzles in Half-Life. Yes, I just finished playing it even though it came out almost 10 years now. What I don't get is why they put all those damn jumping puzzles in a FPS. It was just annoying almost to the point of frustrating. That brought the game down a notch for me.