|
Noknoi
|
Mokewen, Thaiup, and I had a great time at the Viet restaurant last night. We eat a ton of food and Bs'd for three hours. When is our Dragon Club meeting? I want to see some high class Khmer Cholas.
|
Thai Girls : Meet Sexy Thai Girls
Posted on: 6:13 pm on Jan. 30, 2005
|
|
mokewen
|
Ditto - had a great time with the BTF guys last nite in Little Saigon. Great food and great conversation. hadn't seen TU since last April in Grottino's. It was fun getting caught up on everything. Hey RR - let's do the cambodian thing in Long Beach soon. TU will be here in LA for 2 or 3 more weeks. cheers..................... moke
|
Bangkok Women : Meet Sensual Bangkok Women
Posted on: 11:51 pm on Jan. 30, 2005
|
|
Noknoi
|
I'm for next Sat. The weekend after this one I will at the 3 day Real Social Dynamics Boot Camp and will be out picking up Asian sluts in Hollywood. If you guys want to have a great RT on Sat., Feb. 26, come to Fort MacArhtur for our live swing band dance and LA Air Raid show. We do these swing dances every 3-4 months and all the girls show up in their 40's attire. A helluva lot of Asian girls come to this, most are single, and most of the single men do not seem interested....except me of course. I will give everyone VIP tours and jeep rides. I do propose the Khmer Chola place for next Saturday.
|
Thai Girls : Meet Sexy Thai Girls
Posted on: 12:18 am on Jan. 31, 2005
|
|
DaffyDuck
|
How about an RT out in San Gabriel/Monterey Park - lots of variety, and then there's always 'Bayside' to head to for some after dinner mints. *QUACK*
|
Bangkok Girls : Meet Sexy Bangkok Girls
Posted on: 2:17 am on Jan. 31, 2005
|
|
Noknoi
|
Great babes up in that part of the woods. Alot of slutty and nasty Red Chinese and Taiwanese girls. If we are lucking we can see some female mud wrestling between a People's girl and a Taiwanese girl. There's a great hole in the wall in MP (a big chain) called Sam Woo BBQ. I have been eating there for over twenty years and have never deviated from what I order.
|
Thai Women : Meet Matured Thai Women
Posted on: 2:24 am on Jan. 31, 2005
|
|
DaffyDuck
|
Sam Woo rules - but it's not just a hole in the wall, but also a large Dim Sum place overlooking the plaza.
|
Bangkok Women : Meet Beautiful Thai Girls
Posted on: 3:43 am on Jan. 31, 2005
|
|
Ronnie Raygun
|
That would be Sam Woo Seafood on the upper floor, as opposed to Sam Woo BBQ on the ground floor. And these are the San Gabriel outlets, vs the ones in MP, Alhambra, Chinatown, etc. I've even been to one of their Las Vegas restaurants. Now why the heck can't they open one on the Westside? I'm booked this Friday & Saturday nights (Feb. 4 & 5) with Chinese New Year dinners; you guys go ahead without me. The following weekend could work; after that I'm in BKK until the end of the month. FYI, on Monday Feb.14 there will be a large Thai party at The Stone in Hollywood. Perhaps no "slutty and nasty Red Chinese and Taiwanese girls", "Asian sluts" or "Khmer Cholas", but plenty of nice Thai girls.
|
Bangkok Girls : Meet Attractive Thai Girls
Posted on: 7:29 am on Jan. 31, 2005
|
|
Noknoi
|
Darn. In 1990, the old Sam Woo in Chinatown on Broadway and Ord was condemed by the LA Cty Health Dept. I think it had something to do with seaty illegal Red Chinese cooks in wife-beaters smoking while preparing food and the fact that the kitchen is roughly 10 feet from the trash dumpster. Sam Woo put in carpeting, fish tanks, palnters, painted the walls pink, etc.. The kitchen situation has not changed nor has the great food and cheap prices.
|
Thai Girls : Meet Active Thai Girls
Posted on: 2:16 am on Feb. 1, 2005
|
|
mokewen
|
looks like I am going to a chinese new years party this coming sat. night. some of my colleague's wives want to marry me off - so I can be in the hamstrung situation they are in. I think their wives are tired of me telling thier hubbies how much fun I have in Bkk. they think I am a bad influence on the subordinate half. if she looks good enough, I am always open for very very long engagements. let's do something sat nite - 2/12. cheers.................... moke
|
Thai Women : Meet Matured Thai Women
Posted on: 8:51 pm on Feb. 1, 2005
|
|
Noknoi
|
For those interested in LA History http://www.maxwelldemille.com/air-raid.asp The Great Los Angeles Air Raid On the night and early morning of February 24 and 25, 1942, a singular event unfolded in the skies over Southern California – the continental United States was attacked by an enemy... or was it? The reports of this vary, from a squadron of Japanese bombers, a weather balloon, and even alien spacecraft, and the subsequent government conspiracies that followed. We do know that something happened; too many people witnessed the event to dispute that fact, but what really happened? The newspaper reports from Wednesday morning of the 25, varied wildly. The Los Angeles Examiner said that civilian witness had put the number of planes at fifty, and that three of them had been shot down over the ocean, although there was no immediate confirmation of this from Army or Navy sources. The Los Angeles Times headlines blared “L.A. Area Raided”, and “Jap Planes Peril Santa Monica”. The 77th street police station reported a downed aircraft near 180th street and Vermont. By the light of day what could be put together is that at approximately 3:10 am anti aircraft batteries that had been stationed around Southern California’s defense plants began firing their 12.8 - pound explosive charges and kept this up for fifty minutes, eventually launching over 1,400 of them. The curious thing was that not a single bomb had been dropped on the city, and not a single scrap of any aircraft was ever recovered. In fact, the only casualties were caused by the falling shrapnel and unexploded ordinance that rained in a 40 mile arc from Santa Monica to Long Beach. Newspaper Rack, San Francisco Examiner, 6 a.m. Extra "OUSTER OF ALL JAPS IN CALIFORNIA NEAR!" February 27, 1942. Early 1942 was a time of much uncertainty to many Southern Californians. Pearl harbor had been attacked just a few months earlier and many were suspicious of the large Japanese population living so close to some of Americas most strategic industries. Just twenty-four hours earlier an enemy submarine had attacked an oil refinery in Goleta, a sleepy coastal town just one hour north of Los Angeles. Although the shelling did less than $500 in damage and caused no casualties, this attack was widely reported in Los Angeles and caused some alarm among the citizenry. That an enemy submarine could surface a couple hundred yards from shore and lob shells onto the beach for thirty minutes was cause for consternation. (The fact that they appeared to be incredibly bad shots was lost on most people at the time.) The day after the air raid, in Washington, Navy Secretary Frank Knox was quoted as saying “as far as I know the whole raid was a false alarm and could be attributed to jittery nerves”. But did any of those one million witnesses actually see an enemy aircraft? Many will point to some sort of government cover-up or conspiracy. However, as we were at war, still stinging from Pearl Harbor, it is reasonable to assume that the United States government would want to keep an enemy attack quiet. The physical evidence points to no aircraft at all being up there that night. As one witness, Jack Illfrey, a young p-38 pilot assigned to the 94th aero squadron stationed at Long Beach Airport reported, “We pilots prayed to the good Lord above that we wouldn't be sent up in that barrage, enemy or not. Most everyone saw or imagined something – Jap Zero’s, P34’s, Jap Betty bombers. We were not sent up”. So not even American interceptors were sent up that night, thankfully, as they may likely have become victims of “friendly fire”. Years later it was discovered that a coastal radar station had indeed seen an inbound blip on their radar screens that night. But was this actually enemy aircraft? Many of the eyewitness accounts of that morning were from average people with no nighttime aircraft observation experience. My own grandfather witnessed this from the roof of the (now defunct) Hollywood Reporter with several other men, and said years later that he thought he might have occasionally seen some silver objects caught in the beams of the searchlights, which, from his observation point, were to the west (Santa Monica) and south towards central Los Angeles, but could not be sure it was not the effect of two beams intersecting. He also saw shell bursts which he described as “orange-red”. Even some more experienced observers like Peter Jenkins, a staff reporter with the evening Herald Examiner, could not be counted as a reliable witness, as he reported that “I could clearly see the “V” formation of about 25 silvery planes overhead moving slowly across the sky towards Long Beach”. Even Long Beach chief of police J. H. McClelland claimed to have witnessed planes inbound towards Redondo Beach. He had witnessed this spectacle from the roof of the Long Beach civic center with a Naval Observer using high-powered binoculars. But again, with all that flack in the air, if there had been planes, one would expect something to get hit. Some have countered that this was an aerial reconnaissance flight, but that is highly unlikely as recon flights are traditionally high and fast and occur during the day, as there is not much to see on the ground at night. Some more plausible theories involve errant weather balloons and even the oft-told story of several of these carrying flares, an apparent response to the alarm of panic. Although no balloons were officially recovered, the Army might have wanted to suppress embarrassing evidence of panic and misjudgment. Regardless, for batteries to be firing from all corners of Los Angeles at an errant weather balloon, even under the duress of the early days of World War II, borders on the ludicrous. Since the 1970’s some have proffered that this was caused by extraterrestrial beings flying over the coast of Los Angeles. They usually point to a famous photograph showing search lights and spots as proof. These spots are probably the detonation of Anti-Aircraft projectiles, aberrations on the film due to motion, reflections, decay of the film itself, or any of a number of things. If there was something up there, it certainly was unidentified, and according to some reports, these crafts were not like anything known to be in use at the time. But, as we have noted, the eyewitnesses themselves did not know what they had seen, and some witnesses although sure, never had their accounts verified. Here's excerpt from an article written for the Daily News by reporter Matt Weinstock. After the war he was talking to man who had served in one of those Army batteries and the gentleman recounted the following story. "Early in the war things were pretty scary and the Army was setting up coastal defenses. At one of the new radar stations near Santa Monica, the crew tried in vain to arrange for some planes to fly by so that they could test the system. As no one could spare the planes at the time, they hit upon a novel way to test the radar. One of the guys bought a bag of nickel balloons and then filled them with hydrogen, attached metal wires, and let them go. Catching the offshore breeze, the balloons had the desired effect of showing up on the screens, proving the equipment was working. But after traveling a good distance offshore and to the south, the nightly onshore breeze started to push the balloons back towards the coastal cities. The coastal radar's picked up the metal wires and the searchlights swung automatically on the targets, looking on the screens as aircraft heading for the city. The ACK-ACK started firing and the rest was history." Enemy attack? UFO? War histeria? Nobody will ever know for sure, but you won't want to miss the recreation of this controversy at the Historic Fort MacArthur on February 26, 2005.
|
Bangkok Girls : Meet Attractive Thai Girls
Posted on: 1:45 am on Feb. 6, 2005
|
|
|
|