Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Ana Beatriz Barros

Ana Beatriz Barros (born May 29, 1982 in Itabira, Minas Gerais, Brazil) is a Brazilian supermodel. She moved to and grew up in Rio de Janeiro, but currently resides in New York. She is of Portuguese/Spanish ethnicity, and has two siblings, Patricia and Malu (Maria Luisa).

She was discovered by the Director of Elite Model Management who was vacationing in Brazil. In 1998 she won the Brazilian Elite Look of the year and was placed second at the International Elite Look of the Year. Then she was given an offer by Guess? for which she is well known.

She has done advertisements not only for Guess? but also for Victoria's Secret, Chanel cosmetics, and Jennifer Lopez's JLO fashion line. Barros has been in shows for the likes of Valentino, Missoni, Gucci, Christian Dior, Versace, Dolce & Gabbana, Michael Kors and many more prestigious fashion houses.

She has been on the cover of magazines such as Vogue, Marie Claire, Allure, Brazilian magazines such as Capricho and Audi magazine, W, ELLE along with many other covers.


TomC

Favorite Video Games

(Joanna Dark)

In a post on my pseudo blog today I mentioned that felt old when I was thinking about the new, slick Joanna Dark that Microsoft and Rare have for the XBOX 360 game Perfect Dark Zero. Also I commented in this post that I don't necessarily need the best graphics ever to think a game is good. Well, I thought I would show you some of my favorite games during my most intensive gaming years to compare with the graphics of today to show a comparison. Mind you that these games are for the N64.

Starting with the original Perfect Dark:



This was the top of the crop of multi player first person shooters at the time. For all of us fans of the original Goldeneye 64 this seemed like as good as it could get. Not only were there cutting edge graphics, multi use weapons, but you could play four play at a time and at four computer controlled bots! (the game got a little choppy then but who cares!). I wasted many a hour on this great game.

The Second Game is MarioKart 64, which is one of the most fun cart games ever! (both the SNES and the GameCube versions of this game are equally as good!):



And Last but not least were the games The Legend Of Zelda: The Ocarina of Time & Majora's Mask:





When I first started playing Ocarina of Time and stepped out on to Hyrule field, I was hooked on videogaming. There seemed to me there was nothing as realistic as this game ever. I bet that that response would garner snickers now:

TomC

a sad sad day

This makes me so sad I don't want tot talk about it, but I suppose I will post a report.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=3045574

April 16, 2007 — A tranquil college campus in Virginia became a killing field Monday morning. At least 33 people are dead in the worst mass shooting in modern American history.

In a Tuesday morning interview with "Good Morning America's" Diane Sawyer, Virginia Tech president Charles Steger said the shooter who killed himself was a student of Asian descent who resided in a Virginia Tech dormitory. He referred to the man as "the second shooter" and said they are still investigating the possibility of two shooters.

Two guns were recovered, a 9 mm pistol and a .22-caliber pistol.

"Well there's one bit of information, that it appears that the second shooter was a resident in a dormitory," he said.

"There may be others, we just don't know."

In a press conference on Monday night, Steger gave a detailed timeline of the morning's tragic events.

He said a 9-1-1 call reporting a shooting at a dormitory was made at approximately 7:15 a.m. While police were trying to assess what they first believed was a domestic dispute, they received a second 9-1-1 call, nearly two and a half hours later, that reported shootings on the opposite side of campus. According to the Virginia Police Chief Wendell Flinchum, officials have not definitively linked the two shootings.

Campus police have identified a person of interest who is not currently in police custody. Police say the person of interest is a male who knew the female killed in the double homicide at the West Ambler Johnston Hall dormitory.

Flinchum said they have ruled out the possibility of a murder-suicide in the first shooting, and that investigators have a preliminary identification of the shooter involved in the Norris Hall shooting. The police will not release the identity at this time.

When asked to describe the scene at Norris Hall, where the second shooting took place, Flinchum called it, "one of the worst things I've seen in my life."

While Flinchum would not name any of the victims, he did say university staff members were among the dead.

The student newspaper's Web site, collegiatetimes.com, printed a list of 14 faculty and staff that were confirmed dead, including four faculty members and 10 students.

Some students question why administrators did not cancel classes after the first shooting, and why it took more than two hours to inform the university community via e-mail about the shootings.
According to Steger, the administration locked down West Ambler Johnston Hall dormitory after the first shooting. But classes weren't canceled because the shooting was believed to be tied to a domestic dispute and campus police believed the shooter had left the campus.

"Schools should be places of safety and sanctuary in learning," President Bush said from the White House. "When that sanctuary is violated, the impact is felt in every American classroom and every American community."

Law enforcement officials told ABC News they believed there was a single gunman who fired at least two 9mm semi-automatic pistols. They said he might have been wearing a bulletproof vest, and that he killed himself after opening fire on his victims.

It is unknown at this time if the guns had standard or extended clips, which can fire as many as 30 shots before the gun has to be reloaded.

No identification was found on the gunman's body, police said. Eyewitnesses described him as an Asian male about 6 feet tall. He apparently shot himself in the head after the killings; part of his face was missing when his body was found.

"Today the university was struck with a tragedy that we consider of monumental proportions," said Virginia Tech's Steger.

Two-Hour Gap Between Shootings

It is also not clear what happened between the two shootings — a gap of two hours. The buildings where they happened are about half a mile apart, a distance one can walk in about 10 minutes, according to Alex Mengel, a freshman at the school.

The first e-mail to students about the first shooting went out at 9:24 a.m., according to copies forwarded to ABC News. By then the shootings were over.

A count by ABC News showed that at least 28 people had been admitted to hospitals.

Eighteen were sent to Montgomery Regional Hospital in Blacksburg. Four others went to Lewis Gale Medical Center in Salem, Va., and six more to hospitals operated by the Carilion Hospital System.

It was too windy to evacuate the injured by helicopter, so the victims were all sent to hospitals by ambulance. Hospital spokespeople said there is currently not a pressing need for additional blood donations.
Engineering student Josh Wargo, a junior at Virginia Tech, said he was sitting in class when students began to hear "loud banging noises" followed by screaming. He said many students began to jump out of a window two stories above ground level.

"We heard almost 40 or 50 shots," Wargo told ABC News. "They were going on from the time we heard them and [people] jumped out the window until almost two minutes later."

"When I landed, I was in a daze, standing outside of the building," Wargo said. "Then I heard shots going through glass — that's when it hit me that I had to get out of there."

Gina Om, another Virginia Tech junior, was at the Montgomery Regional Hospital to be with a friend who had been shot.

"It's kind of surreal right now," Om said. "I've always thought Virginia Tech was very safe … one of the reasons why my mom liked this school."

Michelle Billman, general manager of the student radio station WUVT, told ABC News that someone in her class got a text message around 9:50 a.m. indicating that something was going on.

"We were told to stay in the building, away from the windows," Billman said, describing a frantic scene. "It really wasn't organized. Almost everyone else just left, and while the kids were running out, people said, 'Come back, come back.'"

Students Look Online for Information

Families trying to find their children have been directed by the university to the Inn at Virginia Tech.

But many students were looking online for information about schoolmates. Some of them established a "wall" at Facebook.com to share what they knew; while others turned to MySpace.com.

"Many of us are all worried about our friends, so lets do this. If you are okay! Please update your status in facebook to say something like 'i'm okay,'" wrote a person on Facebook who identified himself as Carlos "Mohawk Monday" Fernandez.

The campus Web system was quickly overwhelmed by e-mail traffic and concerned online visitors after news of the shootings broke. Students said they could not get on Virginia Tech's site for information.

ABC News has confirmed that there were two separate bomb threats last week at Virginia Tech.

The first was directed at Torgersen Hall, a classroom and laboratory building, while the second was directed at multiple engineering buildings. Students and staff were evacuated, and the university sent out e-mails across campus, offering a $5,000 reward for information about the threats.

"I got the e-mails, but my impression was it was prank or nothing serious," said Wargo, describing the Blacksburg campus as "pretty peaceful."

Virginia Tech — formally known as Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University — is located in the western end of the state near the borders of West Virginia and Tennessee. It has more than 25,000 full-time students. Its campus, which spreads over 2,600 acres, has more than 100 buildings.

The number of dead is almost twice as high as the previous record for a mass shooting on an American college campus. That took place at the University of Texas at Austin on Aug. 1, 1966, when a gunman named Charles Whitman opened fire from the 28th floor of a campus tower. Whitman killed 16 and injured 31.

"It is difficult to comprehend senseless violence on this scale," said Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine in a statement. "Our prayers are with the families and friends of these victims, and members of the extended Virginia Tech community."



Fucking people depress me more and more every day.

They probably do no know or read my BLOG, but I send my condolences to everyone involved.


TomC

Metroid Prime 2: Echoes


Yeah, I am a bit of a gaming nerd, but not a very good one! I know everyone is going on & on about the new, next-gen game consoles, like the XBOX 360, Playstation 3 and the Nintendo Wii (which I won't deny, I want!). I guess I am a little behind the times, but I am okay with it. Recently I have gone back to playing Metroid Prime 2 for my Gamecube, and I have been enjoying it quite a bit. I originally bought it not too long after running through the original Metroid Prime (A brilliant game itself), for the bargain price of $20 new, but go burned out on it after just one level because I had been playing the first game for so long. Now, even though the Gamecube console is dead, I thought I would go back to it. You know what? Its still an amazing game. Immersive and fun to play. I guess I am getting old, because I am not necessarily craving newer better graphics or a high definition gaming experience, the graphics for this game were sufficiently powerful to make me feel like I was actually there. So while I will eventually get a Wii, I am sure, Metroid Prime 2 (among several, frankly) is one reason my trusty old Gamecube isn't dead quite yet!



TomC