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Coming Soon! A whole new web site!!!!!

In case anyone is wondering, there is nothing new to say. I have tried my best to put all the issues to rest, but some people are unwilling. So the issue will drop right here, but I will say this.......James...I sure would like my house key, CD, and videos returned to me. Well over 2 weeks ago you said you'd do this.....and I'm still waitng. Other than that I offered you the olive branch so to speak, and I'm not doing so again. Also I want to say thanks to Clint....you are still a friend and I do appreciate the fact you stood with me in trying to come up with a good resolve to all of this. I wish you, Stevie and Matt all the best and hope things go well for the 3 of of you in your future endeavors.


From the "I always wondered about that" dept.........
Alex: Just wondered, isn't it strange that Kamikaze pilots always wore helmets in the films!?! DR MIKE: And they wore helmets in real life, too. But it's not so strange when you remember that flying helmets aren't meant to protect the head from injury. They began life in the first days of aviation as a way of keeping one's head warm in an open cockpit, and even in WWII some planes had no perspex canopy. Those pilots who were lucky enough to be snugly sheltered in a closed cockpit still needed helmets because they contained radio-telephone gear - earphones and speakers - which pilots used to communicate with base and guide each other to targets. So in fact flying helmets made Kamikazes more likely to die, not less likely.