Manoa

Renowned
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  1. Manoa

    On this day...

    Hmmm...May 25, 1977. I was still warm and cozy in my mum's uterus back then...
  2. I've promised someone that I won't go into much more detail on the subject; however, I did want to briefly commend Liv and Kat on their fantastic posts. Well said and I wholeheartedly agree with your sentiments.
  3. TJ, how can you complain about this...

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    Also, there seems to be a lack of respecting each other of late as well.

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    when you post this...

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    Justice of late seems to be filled with a bunch of kid's ranting over stupid stuff, acting like 10 year olds.

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    and this...

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    Yeah, sometimes the truth hurts.

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  4. You and I have chatted a bit and I can totally understand why you're leaving. Hell, I may be not all that far behind you myself. Still somewhat on the fence, but leaning strongly towards that course of action. We'll see...
  5. Hau`oli la hanau Ghost Falcon!
  6. Manoa

    Follow up

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    So you're complaining about the enforcement of a stated policy that you violated (be it intentionally or unintentionally) or the fact that the NCSoft is trying to handle it quietly?

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    The thing that people are upset about is that people who *did not* violate a policy got punished. That and the fact that there has pretty much been no public acknowledgment or apology issued by NCSoft or Paragon Studios about the situation. For something of this magnitude, it's poor customer service to handle the problem quietly.
  7. Manoa

    Follow up

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    What's the deal? What are people so angry about? Is it the PvP thing? What is it, exactly?

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    No...it's not the PvP thing...
  8. Manoa

    Question!

    Damn it's good to have you back Liv!
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    It's obvious what happened at the Paragon Studios office to allow all this new nonsense to go on.

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    ROFL!
  10. Manoa

    Question!

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    Bum-Soldier.

    Powers include

    1. Whisp of Gas
    2. Silent But Deadly
    3. Prairy-Dog
    4. Thunder-Drop
    5. Aim
    6. Butt-Munch
    7. Colonic Expression
    8. Hemherroidal Shift
    9. Diahretic Annihilation.

    Don't even ask about the Secondary powerset... although I will say that the fitness pool, Stamina especially, is highly reccomended.

    Ironically... Hasten, not so much reccomended, at least by team-mates.

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    Mmmm...that totally explains this guy!
  11. Sorry to hear Flea, though I can understand why.
  12. [ QUOTE ]
    (Plus, posting that here won't result in Manoa poisoning my coffee the way "Well, roll an alt and come run with me on Infinity!" might. )

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    <.<

    >.>

  13. [ QUOTE ]
    ...but like I said, I have never run this SF and don't want to be the leader.

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    Doesn't mean you still can't organize something. You could do as Text suggested and take sign-ups here on the boards. Then once you're in-game and have gotten everyone invited, toss the star to someone who is more experienced with that particular SF (and mention that you'd prefer to toss the star to someone more experienced in your sign-up thread).

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    I'm not very familiar with the Saturday Matinee process though.

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    It's super easy! Darkbridger is currently the one who usually organizes them. He selects a TF/SF and posts an announcement here on the Justice boards. People then post in the thread to sign-up and indicate what character they'll be bringing. They're held every Saturday with a 12:45 pm Eastern gathering time and a 1pm Eastern start time. DB does takes special requests...so if you'd like to see a particular TF/ST for a given weekend, you can shoot him a PM to request it.
  14. [ QUOTE ]
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    *nod*

    Dr. Potter.

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    Wait, did anyone ever think that Dr. Who's first name could be Harry?

    IS ANYONE ELSE'S MIND BLOWN?!?!?!

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    Mind blown? So much so that my mind's been freaked...MINDFREAK!!
  15. [ QUOTE ]
    Desi, I'll pass on the word that you're trying to get ahold of him. I think he's on mini-hiatus while dealing with some stuff.

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    While you're at it, be sure to pass along a hug from Manoa!
  16. That turned out fantastic! Absolutely amazing work!
  17. A puppy invaded Justice and promised Doritos...where's the Doritos!
  18. Manoa

    >.> <.<

    Hiya Ramses! Long time no see!
  19. Lovely work DrainBamage! I look forward to seeing the pics of the final result. And gratz Juggy!
  20. I'm game! And to make y'all work for your tags, I'll be playing in /hideall from now on.
  21. I'm calling it now, this is going to be a movie someday...

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    From heavy hearts, a song soars
    Day after boy is slain, shaken schoolmates triumph at choral contest
    The Boston Globe
    By Jenna Russell, Globe Staff | May 13, 2009

    It was the kind of tragedy no school should have to endure. Students - young children, really - wept in the hallways Thursday as word swept through the Warren-Prescott School in Charlestown that an eighth-grader, Soheil Turner, was dead, shot that morning as he waited for his bus.

    So it felt strange and not quite right the next morning as members of the school choir boarded a bus for a statewide singing contest and a trip to an amusement park. Some of the students looked sad and uncertain.

    Their music teacher, Olivia Thompson, felt unsettled, too. But she offered words of reassurance: It's OK to be sad, but it's also OK to have fun.

    "The music you're making is part of what's good in the world, and it's important to keep doing that," Thompson told them.

    What happened later that day stunned the students, their teacher, and the school. The fledgling choir from Charlestown, the only elementary school singing group in the competition, earned the highest point total, beating a roster of larger, better-established choruses from middle and high schools. They did it with a heartfelt rendition of "What a Wonderful World," on a day that, as sixth-grader Mary Evers later said, didn't feel wonderful at all.

    Judges were left in awe, audience members in tears.

    The choir's unexpected triumph brought needed emotional uplift to a small, close-knit school hit hard by a violent act. It also vividly illustrated the resiliency required to be a student in many urban schools and the sheer challenge that students and teachers often face simply to achieve a sense of normalcy.

    "You can feel empathy and sympathy, but you also have to do what you've been trained to do," said principal Dominic Amara, sitting in his office yesterday. "You can put a plaque on the wall or a tree in the ground, and those are nice things, but the best way to honor Soheil is to be a good kid."

    Turner, 15, was shot in Roxbury. The man who killed him has not been identified. The boy had attended Warren-Prescott since first grade, and many of the 437 students knew him well.

    The school - a low, brick complex sandwiched into a dense neighborhood a few blocks from the Bunker Hill Monument - offered kindergarten through sixth grade until three years ago, when it added grades seven and eight. "We get to know the kids and want to keep them," said Amara. Pots of pansies sit by the front door; students in all grades wear uniforms, matching navy-blue polo shirts. The school motto is "Persist and Prevail."

    The choir members range from kindergartners to teenagers. When the group began four years ago, anyone could join; now, students must audition. Practices are held after school on Mondays, when the 39 students cram onto risers in a small room off the auditorium.

    They worked for months on two songs for the Music in the Parks competition, held at the Six Flags New England theme park in Agawam. They were especially proud of "What a Wonderful World," their finale, with two student accompanists, on piano and trumpet, and a voice solo by a third-grader.

    Then, the day before the trip, came news of Turner's death. Students who knew him were devastated; younger children were scared and confused.

    "I didn't feel like singing," said Evers, the 12-year-old. "I said to my friend it's not such a wonderful world."

    Elizabeth Pardy, another sixth-grader, sought a way to take solace in the music.

    "Watching my friends lose someone was very upsetting," she said. "But then I thought, 'I'll sing for Soheil,' and that made me feel better."

    The same thought came to Brandy Giles, 13.

    "It was hard to see everyone crying," she said. "But I thought we shouldn't stop, that he would want us to keep going. People were expecting to hear this beautiful sound. If we didn't put our whole heart into it, it wouldn't be as joyful."

    Standing onstage that morning, they said, they felt nervous, worried by the competition, which included middle school choirs from Georgetown and Tewksbury, but ready to do Soheil proud.

    Watching from the audience, parent John Strachan felt swept by emotion.

    "Just to think about what they were going through and to see them walk out onstage was this amazing dichotomy," he said.

    The judges recorded their critique of each choir. On the tape sent home with Warren-Prescott, one judge pauses to listen, then remarks, "This is what music should be," according to Thompson.

    The Charlestown choir "demonstrated a wonderful sense of discipline, as well as a true love of music-making," the judge, Frank Ward Jr., wrote in an e-mail. "It was a very satisfying and enjoyable performance from such a young group of students."

    The choir took home two trophies, for best elementary and best middle school choir, and two of its soloists, Chloe Shea and Emily Ringrose, won individual prizes. When the winners were announced, "all the girls were screaming so much it hurt my ears," said choir member Declan Coleman, 9.

    Yesterday, the buzz about the choir was still spreading through the school. Students passing the main office between classes bent low to brush the shiny trophies with their fingers, peering closely at a photo of the beaming choir members.

    Parents plan to pitch in to fix up the school's display case for the new prizes.

    "It's phenomenal what they did, and it's something special about kids," Amara said. "If you had adults in this kind of trauma, I doubt they could perform as well."
  22. [ QUOTE ]
    I SWEAR I never participated in any MEOWS. I was innocent! I never wanted to hurt anyone! But the singing cats came to me ... at night ... I couldn't sleep..I just wanted to make it stop , that's why I played along ... they told me they could make it stop :sobs:

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    I'm *so* glad I wasn't the only one who thought of the Meow Mix jingle upon hearing about the meow teams...