Saturday, November 7, 2009

daonolfix

daonolfix
daonolfix is the most search keywords on Google for the month of November 2009, but as you can see on this page "daonolfix" the bad thing is that the first results "Daonolfix: www.houston-media.com ®" virus that leads to influence on chromium, Explorer and Firefox, so beware of it and visit us or search for it if someone tells you what to do.
This article also is a test to see if I can get to the first page on Google and beat that virus when people read this.
Remember daonolfix.exe file is also a virus, delete it if you see it in your system or running in your process manager.

Friday, November 6, 2009

precious movie theaters

precious movie theaters

Precious excitement surrounding the film continues to grow as the gripping story of a young woman's struggle to overcome his past to open in theaters this weekend. The protagonist of the film is Claireece "Precious" Jones, a teenage mother who abused dark skin, obesity and illiteracy.

Dr. Joy Lawson Davis, a diversity educator at the University of Louisiana-Lafayette, considers Push a powerful story that addresses many secrets that the African-American community continues to deal with such as sexual abuse, illiteracy, skin tones and obesity. "I am brown-skinned, but have within my family people whose skin runs the range from fair skinned to very dark. That is who we are in America," she says. "I am proud to see a star in a film who is dark, and whose size represents many within our culture and in African culture. Size is a major issue because of health, but also because of our desire to look more American, whatever that is.'"

If Precious' character will boost the stereotypes about body image, she says that all come in different sizes and shapes. "I do not see how this is a stereotype," he said. "This is part of a rainbow."

kimberly munley

kimberly munley

Sergeant Kimberly Munley has been praised for its "amazing performance and aggressive," Supreme Commander at Fort Hood, Lieutenant General Bob Cone, who attributed it to stop the shooting rampage that killed 13 people, after Texas. Munley attacker was shot four times despite what he himself was wounded.

Munley, who had been trained in active-response tactics, rushed into the building and confronted the shooter as he was turning a corner, Cone said.She was well enough to spend last night phoning fellow officers to find out about casualties in the attack, the New York Daily News reported.

Cone said Munley aggressive response training taught her that "if you act aggressively, so the shooter will have fewer victims."

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