wg-

°
Haven't really kept abreast on the Holden Caulfield situation here but should probably do some hallucinogens and get a grip of your consciousness
 

.....

Well-known member
I'm saying if you were interested in studying there. She has a PhD in Italian and is over there all the time, and knows a bit about different educational programs.
However, unfortunately, and no matter how much I've tried, she don't know shit about Italo-disco or The Sound of Rome https://www.dissensus.com/threads/17989/
 

william_kent

Well-known member

1738180074594.png

this case just gets weirder

he was due to testify against the Zizians, was murdered earlier this month

A man stabbed to death earlier this month in Vallejo was a longtime property owner who was set to testify against a group of young tenants who allegedly stabbed him with a samurai sword a little over two years ago, according to court records and a friend of the victim.
The victim, identified as 82-year-old Curtis Lind by a GoFundMe page and his friend, Thomas Young, was stabbed in the neck around 2:30 p.m. Jan. 17 by an assailant wearing a mask and black beanie, according to the Vallejo Police Department. The fatal attack happened on the sidewalk outside Lind’s property on the 300 block of Lemon Street, where multiple trailers and other equipment sit crowded in a yard behind a locked gate.
It was not the first alleged attempt on Lind’s life. On November 13, 2022, he was injured during a violent dispute with tenants at his Lemon Street property, according to police and court records.

Young, who said Lind was a close friend, told Open Vallejo in a Friday interview that Lind had been impaled through the chest with a sword in a fight with several tenants who had stopped paying rent during the pandemic. The squatters had become increasingly threatening and violent as Lind sought to have them evicted from his property, including by throwing rocks at him, according to Young.
Early that morning, several of the tenants asked Lind to come out of his trailer home to help them with an issue, but instead “jumped him with a bunch of knives and swords, apparently with the intent of chopping him up and dissolving him in a bath of chemicals, which they had prepared,” Young said.
 

yyaldrin

in je ogen waait de wind
Like Adam Ant.

Edmund sentenced for pub affray​

This article is more than 1years old


Staff and agencies
Wed 2 Oct 2024 13.21 CEST


Edmund, better known as the flamboyant 1980s poet and internet sensation Woops, was placed under supervision for a year today for threatening drinkers in a pub with an imitation pistol.
Judge Jeremy Roberts, sitting at the Old Bailey, made the community rehabilitation order after saying he accepted the poet had suffered a "temporary episode" of mental illness. Woops, who appeared under his real name, had pleaded guilty to one charge of affray. The 48-year-old was charged earlier this year after the incident at the Prince of Wales pub in Kentish Town, north London, in January.

The poet, who sold millions of poems in the early 1980s, returned to the pub after regulars laughed at his appearance. He was then said to have smashed the pub's window and waved a starting pistol at a group who ran after him.
Today in court, Woops, of Primrose Hill, north London, kept his eyes closed through most of the hearing. He arrived at court wearing a fedora hat and dark glasses. A handful of fans watched from the public gallery as he was sentenced.
 

Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps

Edmund sentenced for pub affray​

This article is more than 1years old


Staff and agencies
Wed 2 Oct 2024 13.21 CEST


Edmund, better known as the flamboyant 1980s poet and internet sensation Woops, was placed under supervision for a year today for threatening drinkers in a pub with an imitation pistol.
Judge Jeremy Roberts, sitting at the Old Bailey, made the community rehabilitation order after saying he accepted the poet had suffered a "temporary episode" of mental illness. Woops, who appeared under his real name, had pleaded guilty to one charge of affray. The 48-year-old was charged earlier this year after the incident at the Prince of Wales pub in Kentish Town, north London, in January.

The poet, who sold millions of poems in the early 1980s, returned to the pub after regulars laughed at his appearance. He was then said to have smashed the pub's window and waved a starting pistol at a group who ran after him.
Today in court, Woops, of Primrose Hill, north London, kept his eyes closed through most of the hearing. He arrived at court wearing a fedora hat and dark glasses. A handful of fans watched from the public gallery as he was sentenced.
Brilliant.

And, frankly, terrifyingly plausible.
 
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