946 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/04/28 18:34
946でーす
947 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/07 02:11
948 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/11 18:57
1000祭りは近い。
949 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/11 19:44
57 名前:1 ◆XEE2aufY :02/05/11 19:43
>>51 またソレかよ……ちょっと意地になってねーか?
もう良いんだ、オマエは悪くない。俺が保証する。
センスがないだけなんだ、気にすんな。
950 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/11 22:43
23 名前:1 :02/05/11 22:39
>>11 この程度のことはすでにやっています。
>>16 先輩に同じことを言っていた人がいましたが、その人は35歳を超えてまだ独身です。
>>20 ・英語ができる人よりバンドをやってるDQNの方がモテる、ということですか。欝ですね。
・英語ができる人が「いくらでもいる」というわけではないことは、
>>1 に
示したとおりです。スポーツをやってる人の方がいくらでもいそうです。
・女性の方が英語はできる、ということですが、そういえば英語が出来るようになって
モテるようになった女性というのも聞いたことないですね。
>>21 どのくらいできれば危険じゃなくなるんでしょうか。
>>22 もっと勉強して、何かいいことがあるのでしょうか。
951 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/13 22:30
あぼーん
952 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/14 11:28
鯖
953 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/14 16:01
954 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/14 16:02
955 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/14 16:02
956 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/14 16:02
957 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/14 16:02
958 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/05/14 16:02
959 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/06/01 15:41
1000
960 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/06/01 15:49
961 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/06/01 15:52
962 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/06/03 12:16
>>76 うまいものもあったのか。イギリスは中華がうまいときいたことがあったが、
イギリス行って中華もなー・・と思ったが、食べられるものがなかったので
食べに行った。しかし日本で食べたほうが・・やっぱり・・・。
>>73 街はいいですよ!嵐が丘も良かったです。あの暗さがイイ!!(・∀・)
ダイエットだと思えば・・イギリス旅行もいいのではないでしょうか。
実際、10日間で3キロほど痩せました。すぐ元に戻りましたが。
963 :
名無しさん@1周年:02/06/03 12:34
MOVIE NEWS :02/05/31 01:10 ID:dO91nhA7
In the fourth film based on a Tom Clancy best-seller,
CIA Deputy Director Jack Ryan is back. After a nuclear
weapon falls into the hands of third-world terrorists,
only Ryan stands between humanity and catastrophe.
The baddies intend to explode the bomb outside the
Baltimore Stadium, the home of the Ravens, and blame
it on the Russians, triggering a war that will destroy
both countries.
Starring Ben Affleck, Morgan Freeman, James Cromwell,
Bridget Moynahan, Liev Schreiber, Philip Baker Hall
Directed by Phil Alden Robinson
Written by Akiva Goldsman, Paul Attanasio
Studio Paramount Pictures
http://www.sumofallfearsmovie.com/
( ゚プ) ハイハイハイハイハイ!!
(つつ
-=≡( ゚ ゚) > >≡( ゚ ゚)
↑ WW ↑
マーガレット フランソワ
(゚プ) コノスレ・・・・
⊂U⊃
( ゚ ゚) ∧ (゚ ゚ )
WW
( ゚プ) オモシロイ!
(つつ
( ゚ ゚) / | ( ゚ ゚)
WW
⊂(゚プ)つ サイコー!!
U_
( ゚ ゚ ) / W ( ゚ ゚ )
W
(゚プ ) デハマタゴジツ。
⊂⊂) )))
(゚ ゚ ))) < < (゚ ゚ ) )))
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- A key Senate Democrat predicted
Sunday that congressional inquiries into intelligence
failures before the September 11 attacks would reveal "
a pattern" of investigators failing to share key
information.
"There were a number of bits and pieces, and they weren't
put together," Sen. Diane Feinstein said on CNN's "Late
Edition." "There were several things that could have been
investigated, had investigation been looked at as a way
to go, which it wasn't."
Feinstein said a Newsweek report that the CIA had tracked
two of the September 11 hijackers for more than a year
without alerting the FBI and other agencies that they had
returned to the United States "isn't news for the
inquiry."
"The professionals working ... on the joint committee
intelligence effort know about this, and they are looking
at it. It's going to be the focus of our hearing," she
said.
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
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According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
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According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
http://www.cnn.com/
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
http://www.cnn.com/
According to Michael Isikoff, author of the Newsweek
article, the CIA knew that at least one of the men went
to the United States after the meeting, and that
information also was not shared.
CNN has previously reported that Almihdhar and Alhazmi
were put on a watch list late last August, and that the
two men had been linked to a suspected al Qaeda operative
in Kuala Lumpur in early 2000.
"The CIA knew who they were, they knew that they were
suspected al Qaeda operatives, they failed to alert the
INS [Immigration and Naturalization Service], the State
Department, the Customs Service, agencies who could have
kept them out of the country," Isikoff said Sunday.
"And, perhaps more importantly, they failed to alert the
FBI, which could have tracked them while they were in
the country," he told CNN.
"What's stunning is that, from that moment on, they [the
two men] lived entirely out in the open. They opened up
bank accounts, they got a California drivers license,
they opened up credit cards and they interacted with at
least five other of the hijackers on 9/11," he said.
The White House downplayed the report Sunday, and a
senior administration official urged people "not to rush
to judgment based on a single report ... coming to light
without context and input from a variety of different
parties."
The official said the CIA was first alerted to the
activities of Alhazmi and Almihdhar during the Clinton
administration.
The official added that Bush officials were "going to
wait and see" what the House and Senate Intelligence
committees find in their joint investigation.
"What we are focused on is fighting and winning the war
on terrorism," the official said.
http://www.cnn.com/
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