Date: 23/07/25 - 10:22 AM   48060 Topics and 694399 Posts

Author Topic: KSU vs. NU in Tokyo  (Read 1902 times)

October 29, 2007, 10:17:56 PM
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chum1

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Anyone ever been to Tokyo?  I'm dying to go.

October 29, 2007, 10:19:07 PM
Reply #1

fatty fat fat

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    The very best.
It is a tragedy because now, we have at least an extra month without Cat football until next year. I hate wasting my life away but I can hardly wait until next year.

October 30, 2007, 07:11:45 AM
Reply #2

KSUTOMMY

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I heard the Sushi there is decent - right up there with the Mongolian BBQ in Westloop.

October 30, 2007, 07:57:49 AM
Reply #3

southkscatfan

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I have been there. Worth going at least once if you like to travel. Language barrier is not as bad as you would think as almost all japanese learn English in school. Also lots of foreign travelers and non Asian trim there as well.

                                  :thumbsup:

October 30, 2007, 09:25:41 AM
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FHSU92

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What channel is Versus on in Japan?  Thinking about getting either DirecTV or Dish, I'll prolly get the one with versus.  Thanks.

October 30, 2007, 09:32:15 AM
Reply #5

pissclams

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Wait a minute, what town is Tokyo in?


Cheesy Mustache QB might make an appearance.

New warning: Don't get in a fight with someone who doesn't even need to bother to buy ink.

October 30, 2007, 11:10:59 AM
Reply #6

ksu_FAN

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A trip to Japan is where its at.  Its all good.*

*As long as our players sit on the correct side of the plane.

October 30, 2007, 11:15:25 AM
Reply #7

ECN

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i lived there for 1.5 years.

second best place ive lived.
We all know there's been a conspiracy. Only the failures have been recorded.
We all pay too much attention to Icarus, and not enough to his father.

October 30, 2007, 01:00:05 PM
Reply #8

pissclams

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really?  what part of tokyo?  i hear some areas are not friendly to 'outsiders'


Cheesy Mustache QB might make an appearance.

New warning: Don't get in a fight with someone who doesn't even need to bother to buy ink.

October 30, 2007, 01:01:45 PM
Reply #9

ECN

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really?  what part of tokyo?  i hear some areas are not friendly to 'outsiders'

Yebisu Garden Place

they F'n hate americans.
We all know there's been a conspiracy. Only the failures have been recorded.
We all pay too much attention to Icarus, and not enough to his father.

October 30, 2007, 01:10:11 PM
Reply #10

pissclams

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figures, prolly still pissed about Pearl Harbor 


Cheesy Mustache QB might make an appearance.

New warning: Don't get in a fight with someone who doesn't even need to bother to buy ink.

October 30, 2007, 01:17:50 PM
Reply #11

ECN

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or the two bombs that we dropped.

but yeah, it's intimidating....and if you dont know anyone...it can be depressing.
We all know there's been a conspiracy. Only the failures have been recorded.
We all pay too much attention to Icarus, and not enough to his father.

October 30, 2007, 01:22:05 PM
Reply #12

pissclams

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hell.  i'd prolly learn karate/ninja training and just do that for a while after marrying a nice tokyoian princess.


Cheesy Mustache QB might make an appearance.

New warning: Don't get in a fight with someone who doesn't even need to bother to buy ink.

October 30, 2007, 03:09:45 PM
Reply #13

hawkhatter02

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or the two bombs that we dropped.

but yeah, it's intimidating....and if you dont know anyone...it can be depressing.

Are they still pissed about those little ol' bombs?  come on now that was almost 60 years ago...surely they have worked out all their deformaties and rebuilt those cities by now... talk about holding a grudge... :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower:

October 30, 2007, 08:57:36 PM
Reply #14

LimestoneOutcropping

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or the two bombs that we dropped.

but yeah, it's intimidating....and if you dont know anyone...it can be depressing.

Are they still pissed about those little ol' bombs?  come on now that was almost 60 years ago...surely they have worked out all their deformaties and rebuilt those cities by now... talk about holding a grudge... :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower:

No kidding.  They are as bad as Davison.  Get over it.

October 31, 2007, 09:36:36 AM
Reply #15

Pittcat

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or the two bombs that we dropped.

but yeah, it's intimidating....and if you dont know anyone...it can be depressing.

Are they still pissed about those little ol' bombs?  come on now that was almost 60 years ago...surely they have worked out all their deformaties and rebuilt those cities by now... talk about holding a grudge... :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower:

D+ history student?   

November 01, 2007, 03:14:55 PM
Reply #16

hawkhatter02

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or the two bombs that we dropped.

but yeah, it's intimidating....and if you dont know anyone...it can be depressing.

Are they still pissed about those little ol' bombs?  come on now that was almost 60 years ago...surely they have worked out all their deformaties and rebuilt those cities by now... talk about holding a grudge... :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower:

D+ history student?   

62 years ago if you want me to be exact... for as nonserious as this board is and you want me to get specific on a history fact???  I bet its been that long since you got laid!   :ustupid:

November 01, 2007, 03:46:34 PM
Reply #17

Pittcat

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or the two bombs that we dropped.

but yeah, it's intimidating....and if you dont know anyone...it can be depressing.

Are they still pissed about those little ol' bombs?  come on now that was almost 60 years ago...surely they have worked out all their deformaties and rebuilt those cities by now... talk about holding a grudge... :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower:

D+ history student?   

62 years ago if you want me to be exact... for as nonserious as this board is and you want me to get specific on a history fact???  I bet its been that long since you got laid!   :ustupid:

In the context of your statement "almost" meant less than.  Hence my remark.  You probably had to look it up on wikipedia to find out when those bombs were dropped.  Take it easy buddy, I was just giving you some crap.   :rolleyes:

November 01, 2007, 04:06:27 PM
Reply #18

hawkhatter02

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or the two bombs that we dropped.

but yeah, it's intimidating....and if you dont know anyone...it can be depressing.

Are they still pissed about those little ol' bombs?  come on now that was almost 60 years ago...surely they have worked out all their deformaties and rebuilt those cities by now... talk about holding a grudge... :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower:

D+ history student?   

62 years ago if you want me to be exact... for as nonserious as this board is and you want me to get specific on a history fact???  I bet its been that long since you got laid!   :ustupid:

In the context of your statement "almost" meant less than.  Hence my remark.  You probably had to look it up on wikipedia to find out when those bombs were dropped.  Take it easy buddy, I was just giving you some crap.   :rolleyes:

no need to use wikipedia, I have August 10th and August 12th marked on my calendar every year to celebrate us bombing the crap out of those bastards!!!  I also mourn on December 7th, still can't believe the German's bombed pearl harbor!!!  :curse:

November 01, 2007, 04:58:01 PM
Reply #19

Pittcat

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or the two bombs that we dropped.

but yeah, it's intimidating....and if you dont know anyone...it can be depressing.

Are they still pissed about those little ol' bombs?  come on now that was almost 60 years ago...surely they have worked out all their deformaties and rebuilt those cities by now... talk about holding a grudge... :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower:

D+ history student?   

62 years ago if you want me to be exact... for as nonserious as this board is and you want me to get specific on a history fact???  I bet its been that long since you got laid!   :ustupid:

In the context of your statement "almost" meant less than.  Hence my remark.  You probably had to look it up on wikipedia to find out when those bombs were dropped.  Take it easy buddy, I was just giving you some crap.   :rolleyes:

no need to use wikipedia, I have August 10th and August 12th marked on my calendar every year to celebrate us bombing the crap out of those bastards!!!  I also mourn on December 7th, still can't believe the German's bombed pearl harbor!!!  :curse:

"Let it go, he's on a roll."  (or something like that)  :lol:

November 01, 2007, 05:11:27 PM
Reply #20

Dirty Sanchez

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Speaking of "the bomb"

In today's news:

Quote
Paul Tibbets, Pilot Who Bombed Hiroshima, Dies at 92 (Update2)

By David Henry
Enlarge Image/Details

Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Paul Tibbets, the U.S. pilot who opened the age of nuclear warfare by dropping the atom bomb ``Little Boy'' on Hiroshima in World War II, has died. He was 92.

He died earlier today at his home in Columbus, Ohio. Tibbets suffered small strokes and heart failure in recent years and had been in hospice care, the Columbus Dispatch reported.

The Air Corps colonel in the cockpit of ``Enola Gay'' -- named after his mother -- led the mission on Aug. 6, 1945, killing at least 70,000 people instantly and demolishing almost two-thirds of the Japanese city. The uranium-laden device was the culmination of more than $2 billion of research in the race to beat Nazi Germany to develop atomic weapons. Japan surrendered a day after a plutonium bomb destroyed Nagasaki on Aug. 9.

``What he had done changed the world in ways so profound that philosophers and theologians will be discussing and debating it as long as mankind exists,'' author and journalist Bob Greene said in ``Duty,'' a book published in 2000 about Tibbets and the World War II generation.

The four aircrew members, who included bombardier Tom Ferebee, navigator Theodore ``Dutch'' van Kirk and flight engineer Wyatt Duzenbury, became part of the top-secret Manhattan Project, the team led by physicist Robert Oppenheimer in Los Alamos, New Mexico, to develop the atom bomb. Only Tibbets, 29 at the time, was informed of the bomb type before the mission.

Under the codename ``Silverplate,'' referring to the modification of the B-29 Superfortress aircraft chosen to carry the 10,000-pound (4,536-kilogram) weapon, the plane took off from the Pacific island of Tinian, near Guam, and unloaded its deadly cargo at 8:15 a.m. local time.

Oppenheimer's Advice

At the advice of Oppenheimer, Tibbets was required to steer the plane at an angle of 159 degrees in either direction as fast as possible after bomb release to have the best chance of survival and avoid the shockwaves from the explosion 10 miles away. After observing the destruction and taking photographs for several minutes, they escaped to safety over the Sea of Japan.

``The city we had seen so clearly in the sunlight a few minutes before was now an ugly smudge,'' the Columbus Dispatch quoted Tibbets as saying. ``It had completely disappeared under this awful blanket of smoke and fire.''

Tibbets told the U.K.'s Guardian newspaper in 2002 that a third nuclear device had been ordered by Curtis LeMay, chief of staff of the strategic air forces in the Pacific, after the Nagasaki bombing, though it was never used. Tibbets also revealed the unit's initial plan to drop an atom bomb in Europe.

``My edict was as clear as could be,'' he said in the interview. ``Drop simultaneously in Europe and the Pacific because of the secrecy problem. You couldn't drop it in one part of the world without dropping it in the other.''

Tibbets expressed no regret for his role in the bombing of Hiroshima and said it saved thousands of American lives by averting the need for a ground-based invasion of Japan to end the war.

Early Years

Paul Warfield Tibbets was born on Feb. 23, 1915, in Quincy, Illinois. His father moved the family in the mid-1920s to Miami, where he worked in the real-estate industry. Tibbets had his first ride in an airplane at age 12, when he accompanied a pilot during a promotion flight to throw Baby Ruth candy bars to the crowd below at the Hialeah race horse track near Miami.

He attended Western Military Academy in Alton, Illinois, as a teenager before studying medicine at universities in Florida and Cincinnati, mostly to satisfy his father's wishes. Tibbets then chose aviation as a career by becoming a cadet in the Army Air Corps at Fort Thomas, Kentucky, in 1937.

During World War II, he commanded the 340th Bomb Squadron and flew 25 missions in B-17 aircraft over Europe and later served in air raids on North Africa.

In 1943, Tibbets returned to the U.S. to test-fly Boeing Co.'s Superfortress B-29 airplane, the most sophisticated and expensive bomber of its time. He then arranged for the modification of some B-29s to hold a nuclear weapon by removing the turrets and armor plating and reconfiguring the bomb bay.

Postwar Career

After the war, Tibbets was a technical adviser on nuclear weapons tests at Bikini Atoll and oversaw the purchase of the B- 47 six-engine bomber for the Air Force. He also set up the National Military Command Center in the Pentagon. Tibbets rose to the rank of brigadier general and served almost 30 years in the U.S. Air Force before retiring in 1966. He moved to Geneva to operate Lear jets in Europe and consulted for government ministries in the region.

He joined Executive Jet Aviation in Columbus, Ohio, in 1970, becoming chairman in 1982.

``Enola Gay'' was fully restored and is on display at the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum near Washington Dulles International Airport.

Tibbets is survived by his wife, Andrea, and three sons -- Paul III, of North Carolina; Gene, of Alabama; and James, of Columbus. He requested that there be no funeral to avoid attracting protesters, the Associated Press reported.

November 02, 2007, 09:29:40 AM
Reply #21

hawkhatter02

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or the two bombs that we dropped.

but yeah, it's intimidating....and if you dont know anyone...it can be depressing.

Are they still pissed about those little ol' bombs?  come on now that was almost 60 years ago...surely they have worked out all their deformaties and rebuilt those cities by now... talk about holding a grudge... :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower:

D+ history student?   

62 years ago if you want me to be exact... for as nonserious as this board is and you want me to get specific on a history fact???  I bet its been that long since you got laid!   :ustupid:

In the context of your statement "almost" meant less than.  Hence my remark.  You probably had to look it up on wikipedia to find out when those bombs were dropped.  Take it easy buddy, I was just giving you some crap.   :rolleyes:

no need to use wikipedia, I have August 10th and August 12th marked on my calendar every year to celebrate us bombing the crap out of those bastards!!!  I also mourn on December 7th, still can't believe the German's bombed pearl harbor!!!  :curse:

"Let it go, he's on a roll."  (or something like that)  :lol:

damn it I was hoping to slide that by you during your efforts to correct my history!! I bowe down to your knowledge!!!  :thumbsup: