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Posted at 4:39 PM on Jan. 28, 2007
I think i just Destroyed  someone!
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cool,dude.

Posted at 6:40 PM on Jan. 23, 2007
yesterday I went to the tallest tower in san antonio. its called the tower of the americas. we saw the kerrville bus co.
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chet gecko

Posted at 9:18 PM on Jan. 18, 2007
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:(

Posted at 9:15 PM on Jan. 18, 2007
I'm deeply disturbed.I am strickin deep deep deep down in my shoe.I'm dying on the inside.
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friend artical that I forgot the name of.

Posted at 12:02 PM on Jan. 17, 2007
this is a LDS artical of a magizine. I forgot the name.enjoy

Little Willie Splasher wasn’t big enough! Take the day Teacher Hushposher said, “Who can reach the top library shelf?”

Peter Brown said, “I can.”

Jack Santos said, “I can.”

Meg Nash said, “I can.”

And Little Willie Splasher said, “I can’t.”

You can believe that Little Willie Splasher was miffed. And he looked glum. But he said nothing. Peter Brown, Jack Santos, and Meg Nash cleaned the library shelves for Teacher Hushposher.

Take the time Teacher Hushposher thumped on the desk and declared, “Will all the children who can reach the top of the blackboard please stand.”

Peter Brown stood up.

Meg Nash stood up.

But Little Willie Splasher didn’t!

You can believe that Little Willie Splasher was miffed. He looked glum. But he said nothing. And Peter Brown, Jack Santos, and Meg Nash cleaned the blackboard for Teacher Hushposher.

One day, Teacher Hushposher stood up in front of the classroom and announced, “I need three nice, tall children to be tall pine trees in our school play. Let me see, who can that be?”

“Me!” cried Peter Brown.

“Me!” cried Jack Santos.

“Me!” cried Meg Nash.

“Not me!” mumbled Little Willie Splasher.

You can believe Little Willie Splasher was miffed. And he looked glum. But he said nothing. Peter Brown, Jack Santos, and Meg Nash were beautiful tall pine trees for the school play.

So it’s no wonder Little Willie Splasher decided that being little was like being good for nothing! And the more Little Willie Splasher thought about it, the more unhappy he became. That’s why Little Willie Splasher went to school one Monday feeling gloomy. He went to school on Tuesday feeling like a rotten egg!

But leave it to foxy Teacher Hushposher. He called Little Willie Splasher in from recess. Now when Teacher Hushposher called you in from recess, you were in trouble! So you can believe poor Little Willie Splasher was pretty scared when he faced Teacher Hushposher. Especially since Little Willie Splasher had no idea what kind of trouble he was in!

Teacher Hushposher cleared his throat. He took a long, hard look at Little Willie Splasher and said, “What is your problem?”

“Why nothin’. Nothin’ at all,” Little Willie Splasher replied.

“Come, come now.” Teacher Hushposher said. “I haven’t seen you smile for a week. And you never speak unless you are spoken to. There has to be something wrong.”

At first Little Willie Splasher insisted there wasn’t, but finally he blurted, “It’s just that I’m never big enough to do anything.”

“Oh, that’s it!” Teacher Hushposher grinned. “Someday you will find out that being little is no problem at all. Now run along and play.” So Little Willie Splasher hurried outside to play, but his heart wasn’t in it.

It was that very afternoon, right in the middle of spelling, that someone let out a shriek and cried, “Myrtle the turtle is gone!” Everyone gasped at the empty bowl on Teacher Hushposher’s desk.

“Tut, tut, now,” Teacher Hushposher exclaimed. “That turtle must be right here in this room.”

As Teacher Hushposher looked all around and under everything, the class did, too. It was Jack Santos who spied Myrtle the turtle in the corner under the reading table.

“I’ll get her!” cried Peter Brown, who was used to being big enough to do everything. He tried. And he tried. But he couldn’t! For Peter Brown was too big to squeeze in between the table and the supply cupboard where Myrtle the turtle was snoozing.

“I’ll get her!” cried Jack Santos. “I’m thinner.” So he tried. And he tried. But he couldn’t! For he was too big, too!

“I’ll get her!” Meg Nash cried next. “After all, I have the longest arms.” So she tried. And she tried. But she couldn’t, because she was too big and her arms weren’t long enough!

Teacher Hushposher frowned. “If we only had a little fellow who could squeeze in there and pick Myrtle the turtle up, our problem would be solved,” he said.

Little Willie Splasher’s heart was pounding. His bright little round face was smiling. And before Little Willie Splasher knew it, he heard himself say, “I’ll get her!”

And Little Willie Splasher, who was never big enough to do anything, got up and did something no one else could do because they were to big.
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yo...no go to the snow go. ???

Posted at 11:55 AM on Jan. 17, 2007
okay so over here in san antonio the weather is really cold.its 32 deegres.but it has not snowed yet.there is lots of ice.and sleet.and its wet so we can't play out side.
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top five best video game consols

Posted at 6:50 PM on Jan. 16, 2007
5:play station
4:nintendo 64
3:gba
2ps2
1:game cube
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doublefudge

Posted at 6:50 PM on Jan. 16, 2007

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41st entry!

Posted at 6:46 PM on Jan. 16, 2007
this is my 41st entry! sorry I didint tell you when it was my 40th entry.I didint remember...or did I?
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the feather bed

Posted at 2:39 PM on Jan. 15, 2007
this is another artical from an LDS magizine.

Tommy and Betsy were excited and happy about going out west. “It is just like going on a picnic,” said Betsy.

“It would be if it weren’t so cold,” replied Tommy, as he snuggled down into the featherbed that his father had thrown over the supplies in the bottom of the wagon. It was like settling down into a giant pillow. Its feathery softness kept Tommy and Betsy snug and warm, even though the wind was blowing, snow was falling, and ice was forming on the edges of the wagon cover.

The road was ice-covered. As they started down the steep slope to the river, Father called to Tommy and Betsy, “You had better get out of the wagon and walk. It will be safer that way.”

Tommy and Betsy hated to leave the cozy warmth of their featherbed, but they did not say so. Instead, they climbed out of the wagon and, lowering their heads into the wind, walked the remaining distance down the hill to the river. While they were waiting for their father and mother, it started to hail. The hailstones were big, and to Tommy and Betsy it felt as if it were raining bullets. Betsy was frightened; both she and Tommy were freezing. Tommy said, “Let’s jump up and down and laugh at the hailstones. At least that will help us get warm.” And that was the way their father and mother found them—laughing at the hailstorm.

When Tommy and Betsy saw Father leading the frightened oxen and Mother walking by his side, holding a pan to protect his head from the hailstones, they were glad that they were found laughing instead of crying. Happily they climbed into the back of the wagon and settled once more into the cozy warmth of their featherbed.

In a moment or two, Tommy raised a corner of the wagon cover and peeked out. To his amazement he saw wagons coming from every part of town. “How can they all cross the river?” he wondered aloud. “The ferry is locked in ice.”

His father, who at that moment was near the back of the wagon, heard Tommy and answered him. “We will go across the river on the bridge our Heavenly Father has provided—a bridge of ice a mile long.”

Tommy looked across the river. It was so far to the other side! Could a river so big freeze solid enough to hold up a heavy covered wagon? He was breathless with fear that when his father moved the oxen onto the ice it would crack, but it did not! Tommy and Betsy sighed with relief as one wagon after another followed until there was a whole train of them moving slowly across the river. The ice would hold!

For a moment all was quiet, and into their hearts came a feeling that their Heavenly Father really loved them and that he would watch over and protect them on their journey west. It was then that a woman started to sing, and soon others joined in. The singing continued until the wagon train arrived at Sugar Creek.

Sugar Creek was the place where the Saints expected to camp until the weather was warmer. The people who had arrived there the week before heard the singing, and they built campfires—many of them—to welcome the travelers and so that all could get warm when they arrived. Tommy and Besty were thankful for the campfires. They stood in front of the one nearest their wagon and turned first to one side and then to the other, until they were toasty warm. Tommy left the fire first to help his father feed the oxen and milk the cow.

“Betsy,” called her mother, “please bring a loaf of bread out of the bread box so we can have bread and milk for supper.”

The loaf of bread was frozen solid. Her mother tried to cut it with a knife. Then she tried to break it with a hammer, but she only succeeded in making Betsy laugh. When her father came with a pail of milk, he said, “I’ll get the saw,” and they all laughed when they saw him try to cut that little loaf of bread with his big saw. He succeeded in breaking off small pieces. Tommy and Betsy put these pieces into the warm milk.

That night when Tommy and Betsy snuggled down into their warm featherbed, they thought of all that had happened during the day. Betsy thought of her kitten, of the chair with the big round back, and of the clock they’d left back in Nauvoo. In her mind she could hear the clock saying “Sleep, Betsy. Sleep, Betsy,” just as it used to do. And Betsy was soon asleep.

With Tommy it was different. He thought about the wicked men who had driven them from Nauvoo, and he hoped these men would not follow them out west. The more he thought, the more wide awake he became. Because he was so wide awake, he heard all the noises of the camp. It sounded as if many people were going from one wagon to another. Then he heard the ice on the wagon cover crack as Father raised a corner and said, “Tommy, Betsy, wake up!”

Tommy was up in an instant. “Is something the matter?” he asked.

“Sister Johnson has a new baby girl,” replied his father. “Your featherbed would help the mother and the baby keep warm on this bitter cold night.”

By that time Betsy was awake, and both she and Tommy helped their father pull the featherbed out of the wagon. Afterwards, her father bundled Betsy up in some quilts and she went back to sleep.

Tommy was too excited to sleep. Instead, he stood by the fire, which was blazing brightly. He had been there just a minute or so when his mother came out of Sister Johnson’s wagon carrying the baby. “It will only be a minute before the featherbed is ready, and then we will tuck her in next to her mother, and she will be snug and warm,” she said. “In the meantime, it is much warmer here by the fire than it is in the wagon.” Tommy looked at the ice on the wagon cover and knew that this was true.

The next morning when he and Betsy asked about the baby, their mother said, “Instead of just one new baby, there were nine babies born last night.”

“Nine new babies!” Tommy and Betsy could hardly believe their ears.

Mother looked from one to the other and said softly, “I know of at least one of those babies who is doing well because two kind children gave up their precious featherbed so the baby could be warm.”

Tommy and Betsy smiled at each other, and a warm glow of happiness filled their hearts.

comment please
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comments please

Posted at 2:36 PM on Jan. 15, 2007
give me a comment
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top five best bands

Posted at 2:31 PM on Jan. 15, 2007
5:three days grace
4:green day
3:evenessence
2:all american rejects
1:linkin park
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kingdom hearts 2

Posted at 2:27 PM on Jan. 15, 2007
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my last entry

Posted at 2:11 PM on Jan. 15, 2007
this is my last entry... what are you doing you fool...whatever...
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the porpise

Posted at 9:38 PM on Jan. 14, 2007

The porpoise is
A gentle soul,
Innocent of guile.
She frolics in
The waves and wears
A Mona Lisa smile.

Once sailors thought
A Lorelei
Was luring them astray.
But it was just
A porpoise—
A merry, friendly
Porpoise—
Inviting them to play.
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I'm sad...I'm not happy...I'm not,not sad...

Posted at 9:32 PM on Jan. 14, 2007
lately nobody has been commenting me no don't smile...thats not good...I'm so despret I'm willing to make a fool of my self...packapocketpeekaboo...mudderdaless...shinaplowey...circusmurcussunoah...arenysldy...qwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnm...are you happy now.?
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top five best songs

Posted at 9:27 PM on Jan. 14, 2007
5:points of authority(linkin park)
4:move along (all american rejects)
3:one step closer(linkin park)
2:helena(my chemical romance)
1:call me when your sober(evanessence)





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kingdom hearts

Posted at 2:47 PM on Jan. 14, 2007
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today.

Posted at 12:27 PM on Jan. 13, 2007
today in the news(not really)My grandma is coming ova...and we get to play games! thats about It exept chris is going to play a basket ball game...uh...
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here comes the snow

Posted at 12:25 PM on Jan. 13, 2007
this is an artical from an LDS magizine...enjoy.

Soft snow,
White snow,
Floating gently down.
Lacy snowflakes,
Frosting field and town.

Cold snow,
Wet snow,
Filling up the air.
Downy feathers,
Piling everywhere.
I hope you liked it.
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