Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Academia.com Lugosi Technical Articles...
www.academia.com for the latest Lugosi Autosport Technical Articles...Thanks So Very Much..
Thursday, August 8, 2013
A WHORE HOUSE WHERE THE HOOKERS ARE ROBOTS?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TPX-AF8ccXQ THIS VIDEO TALKS ABOUT A BROTHEL NOT IN SAN DIEGO MIND YOU...THIS BLOG HAS SOME LINKS TO SOME PRETTY INTERESTING VIDEO'S ABOUT THIS DISTURBING NEW TREND
ALTHOUGH LUGOSI IS A JDM AUTO PERFORMANCE SHOP, STILL THIS ARTICLE THEI VIDEO ARTICLE ABOUT A FUTURE ROBOT BROTHEL JUST BLEW MY MIND..
ENJOY THE VIDEO..KEEP IN MIND AGAIN, THIS IS NOT IN SAN DIEGO
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TPX-AF8ccXQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-TTyN5h_hc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IC2hg1yxv9E
ALTHOUGH LUGOSI IS A JDM AUTO PERFORMANCE SHOP, STILL THIS ARTICLE THEI VIDEO ARTICLE ABOUT A FUTURE ROBOT BROTHEL JUST BLEW MY MIND..
ENJOY THE VIDEO..KEEP IN MIND AGAIN, THIS IS NOT IN SAN DIEGO
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TPX-AF8ccXQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-TTyN5h_hc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IC2hg1yxv9E
Riley Cooper returns, practices
wide receiver Riley Cooper, who returned to practice on Tuesday after a brief stint away from the team, said that he's spoken with each of his teammates individually since a video capturing him using a derogatory racial remark went viral, asking them not to forgive him for his actions, but to judge him by his future.
"I talked to everyone individually," he said following the team's joint practice with the New England Patriots. "I told them, 'I don't want you to forgive me, because that puts the burden on you. I want it all on me.' I told them that and I told them I apologize. They could tell it was from the heart, they know I'm not that kind of person. It feels good to have support from the guys."
He added that he felt that 100 percent of his teammates were in support of him, something he sensed on the field in his return.
"It felt good to be out there with the guys and catching and running and making some plays and them coming up to you, supporting you, high-fiving you, chest-bumping you like Jason Avant did in the end zone when I had that TD," Cooper said. "It just felt good to be back out here with the guys."
The Eagles had excused Cooper on Friday and sent him for sensitivity training after video of his remark, made at a Kenny Chesney concert in June, surfaced last week.
His goal now is to earn the respect back from his teammates that he may have lost since the video surfaced. Running back LeSean McCoy recently said that he had lost respect for Cooper after the remarks.
"Absolutely, just by my actions," Cooper said of gaining respect back. "Don't judge me for the past, more so the future and just watch my daily moves and what I'm doing."
Fellow wide receiver Avant, among the team leaders spotlighted by coach Chip Kelly, said that the Eagles are over the situation as a team.
Mike and Mike
ESPN NFL reporter Sal Paolantonio weighs in on the Eagles' treatment of Riley Cooper when he returned to practice, Philadelphia's QB competition and more.
"I think you guys [the media] need the healing process more than the team," Avant said. "You guys got to cover it, so you keeping going, making the story go, but as far as our team, I think guys are definitely over it and we talked, we've had dialogue, we've accepted his apology. The only thing he can do is apologize. What else can he do? When a situation happens like that, there's not too many things you can do but apologize and be sincere about it. Now you guys have to get over it."
Asked whether or not a situation could arise where the team would part ways with Cooper due to the fallout from the situation, Kelly squashed the notion.
"I don't see that happening," he said. "After talking to our players, I think our players really understand the situation ... I don't envision that happening."
Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie said in a statement Tuesday that Cooper's slur was "totally unacceptable" but that the receiver was working to regain trust with the team and community. Cooper was fined by the Eagles after his slur became known last week.
"His words may have been directed at one person but they hurt everyone. Riley has apologized to the team and community and has made a personal commitment to work hard to try and gain their trust and earn his position on the team," Lurie said in the statement.
Cooper, a fifth-round pick of the team in 2010, remains hopeful that he has a future on the field in Philadelphia.
"I sure do hope, and I'm going to try each and every day to prove that and play as hard as I can and play my game," he said. "I want to stay here."
Regardless of his future with the Eagles, Cooper also understands that this is an incident that he's going to have to live with for the rest of his life.
"It's going to be tough, no doubt about it," he said. "I'm going to live with this every day for the rest of my life. It's one of those things, you can't let it affect your play on the field, and that's what I'm going to strive to do."
[+] Enlarge
John Geliebter/USA TODAY SportsRiley Cooper said it felt good to be back practicing with the Eagles.
Kelly said that the decision for Cooper to return was a mutual one, while Cooper noted that he'll continue to seek guidance on the issue as needed going forward.
"I talked to Chip last night and this morning, and he asked, he said, 'How do you feel? Are you ready to come back?' and I said absolutely," Cooper said. "I love being out here on the field and I love being out there with my guys."
The training, Cooper said, helped him understand the severity of his remarks.
"We just talked about the situation and how big this is," he said of the training. "I realize that, and I realize how many people I've hurt, how many families I've hurt, how many young kids I've hurt, and that's what we talked about, the severity of it. I realize that and I take full responsibility for it."
While Cooper said that all of the players on the field were "great" toward him on Tuesday, he understands that he'll likely continue to hear about this situation from opponents and other players in the future.
"I know people are going to say stuff, but people have always said stuff," he said. "You have to be the bigger man and have to have thick skin, especially in this situation."
The Eagles may have to lean on Cooper more on the field in light on Tuesday's injury toArrelious Benn.
Benn, acquired by the Eagles in a trade with Tampa Bay, suffered a torn ACL in his left knee during practice. The team also released wide receiver Dave Ball.
Official: 3 winning tickets for $448M Powerball jackpot
With almost $450 million on the line, the nearly nationwide lottery Powerball game picked a set of winning numbers Wednesday: 05, 25, 30, 58, 59 and Powerball 32.
And three tickets — one sold in Minnesota and two in New Jersey — matched Wednesday's winning numbers, Sue Dooley, senior drawing manager production coordinator for the Multi-State Lottery Association, said late Wednesday night. She said it wasn't yet clear exactly where the tickets had been sold or who the winners were.
Lottery officials estimated the jackpot at $448 million. The allure of all that money had players in a buying frenzy Wednesday, further confirming a trend that lottery officials say has become the big ticket norm: Fatigued Powerball players, increasingly blasé about smaller jackpots, often don't get into the game until the jackpot offers big bucks.
Meghan Graham, a convenience store worker from Brookline, Mass., has purchased nearly a dozen Powerball tickets in recent months thanks to the huge jackpots, and the third-largest-ever pot was enough reason to buy again.
"The more it keeps increasing, that means nobody is winning ... a lot of people are gonna keep buying tickets and tickets and tickets and you never know, you just might get lucky if you pick the right numbers," she said.
A recent game change intended to build excitement about the lottery increased the frequency of huge jackpots, and Wednesday's jackpot drawing comes only a few months after the biggest Powerball jackpot in history — a $590 million pot won in Florida.
With a majority of the top 10 Powerball jackpots being reached in the past five years, lottery officials acknowledge smaller jackpots don't create the buzz they once did.
"We certainly do see what we call jackpot fatigue," said Chuck Strutt, executive director of the Multi-State Lottery Association. "I've been around a long time, and remember when a $10 million jackpot in Illinois brought long lines and people from surrounding states to play that game."
Tom Romero, CEO of the New Mexico Lottery and chairman of the Powerball Group, agreed.
"Many years ago, $100 million was really exciting and people would immediately buy more, occasional players would start buying," he said. "Then the threshold was $200 million. Now, we see here in New Mexico, we're approaching the $300 million mark."
The revamp of Powerball in January 2012 changed the price of a ticket from $1 to $2, a move that upped the chances of the game reaching a major jackpot. There was a loss in the number of players, but the new game — which also created more chances to win smaller, $1 million and $2 million prizes — has brought in 52% more in sales, Strutt said. Sales were $5.9 billion in the fiscal year that ended in June.
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