After a long hiatus from the blog, I was looking at different blogs on WoW.
Maybe I will update this one more often.
A ton has happend since january (my last post). A new Patch brought the Argent Tournament, along with Dual spec'in'. My main toon has for some time been my Death Knight Slobodan. He is now main spec DPS off spec Tank.
I have also moved up my Druid Metamorfasis. She was leved up to 51 and then stopped for all of BC and up until recently in WotLK. She is dual spec'd too. Main spec is Resto, and off spec is Boomkin. She is only 73 right now.
So with just those 2 toons and the dual spec on both I have: Melee dps (Slobodan), Ranged dps (Meta boomkin), Tank (Slobodan) and a Healer (Meta Resto). So when Meta gets up to 80 i will be able to fill any spot that is needed for a run.
I did get Annamraven my rogue up to 80 but she is poorly geared as she is used mostly for daily farming in stealth. LOL.
Bennevis my mage is stalled at 78 I will probably get him up with Meta when she gets up that high.
Lately, the guild has not been running any raids. :( I have been busy leveling Meta that I didn't care much anyways, but I am getting psycd up to retry Ulduar. Naxxramas is just too easy on 10 man and our guild doesn't have enough people for 25 man Naxxramas.
Here is a Question for anybody that might read this. What instance is your favorite of all time?
Saturday, August 1, 2009
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
What is there to stop......?
Here is 2 stories about missing women:
1) EAST HANOVER, N.J. — A 38-year-old East Hanover mother and her two children were found unharmed in Baltimore on Sunday, just days after they disappeared from their home.
Morris County Prosecutor Robert Bianchi said Patricia Schafer, her 13-year-old son, John, and three-year-old daughter, Jessica, were in a vehicle that was leaving the Towson Town Center Mall when it was stopped by Baltimore County police at 6:25 p.m.
Patricia Schafer will be charged with interfering with the custody of the children and will remain jailed in Maryland pending an extradition hearing this week. It was not immediately clear if she had retained an attorney.
Bianchi said East Hanover Police and county authorities determined Schafer was in the mall complex, so mall security and the Baltimore County police were notified. Mall security then followed Schafer's vehicle until the county police arrived.
"The children are in good health and their father is on his way to pick them up and bring them home," Bianchi said in a statement issued Sunday night.
Schafer and the children were last seen by her husband in their home on Thursday morning
2) EL RENO, Okla. — An adult and four young children found dead in an apartment here were victims of a homicide, authorities said Monday.
El Reno police received a call about 4 p.m. to check on the welfare of occupants of a unit at the Elizabeth Place Apartments near Oklahoma 66 and U.S. 81, said Jessica Brown, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation.
"An officer went inside the residence and found multiple dead bodies," Brown said. "He backed out and called for help."
Investigators believe the victims are a woman and her four children, who ranged in age from two to seven, Brown said.
Authorities are looking for the woman's vehicle, a 1989 white Ford Thunderbird with possible front-end damage and black molding down the side. Investigators don't have a license tag number, Brown said.
"We're looking for the vehicle as well as the person driving it," she said. "We're hoping that person can help with a timeline of what happened today."
Investigators have an idea how the five died, but Brown didn't release that information. The state Medical Examiner's office will determine a cause of death and when the deaths occurred, Brown said.
A man who showed up at the apartment complex, located about 30 miles west of Oklahoma City, told The Oklahoman that his ex-wife lives in the unit that was surrounded by police on Monday.
Jason Garas said police told him a woman and children are the victims, but they did not give him any names, The Oklahoman reported.
Garas and his ex-wife were divorced on Dec. 10, according to court records. The couple have a 3-year-old daughter, Garas told the newspaper. The woman also has three children from two other relationships, Garas said.
Brown said more than a dozen OSBI agents were assisting in the investigation.
Police Chief Ken Brown didn't immediately return calls seeking comment.
Ok, so two women that had a bad day to say the least. The first one was running from the law, the second one was a victim.
I was thinking, what about if a woman was taking her children away from a bad situation, like the second story should have, but the murderer had the police track her down like the first woman?
Since I don't know, I am going to pretend that people are reading this blog (haha) and that one of them is in Law Enforcement. What stops that from happening.
1) EAST HANOVER, N.J. — A 38-year-old East Hanover mother and her two children were found unharmed in Baltimore on Sunday, just days after they disappeared from their home.
Morris County Prosecutor Robert Bianchi said Patricia Schafer, her 13-year-old son, John, and three-year-old daughter, Jessica, were in a vehicle that was leaving the Towson Town Center Mall when it was stopped by Baltimore County police at 6:25 p.m.
Patricia Schafer will be charged with interfering with the custody of the children and will remain jailed in Maryland pending an extradition hearing this week. It was not immediately clear if she had retained an attorney.
Bianchi said East Hanover Police and county authorities determined Schafer was in the mall complex, so mall security and the Baltimore County police were notified. Mall security then followed Schafer's vehicle until the county police arrived.
"The children are in good health and their father is on his way to pick them up and bring them home," Bianchi said in a statement issued Sunday night.
Schafer and the children were last seen by her husband in their home on Thursday morning
2) EL RENO, Okla. — An adult and four young children found dead in an apartment here were victims of a homicide, authorities said Monday.
El Reno police received a call about 4 p.m. to check on the welfare of occupants of a unit at the Elizabeth Place Apartments near Oklahoma 66 and U.S. 81, said Jessica Brown, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation.
"An officer went inside the residence and found multiple dead bodies," Brown said. "He backed out and called for help."
Investigators believe the victims are a woman and her four children, who ranged in age from two to seven, Brown said.
Authorities are looking for the woman's vehicle, a 1989 white Ford Thunderbird with possible front-end damage and black molding down the side. Investigators don't have a license tag number, Brown said.
"We're looking for the vehicle as well as the person driving it," she said. "We're hoping that person can help with a timeline of what happened today."
Investigators have an idea how the five died, but Brown didn't release that information. The state Medical Examiner's office will determine a cause of death and when the deaths occurred, Brown said.
A man who showed up at the apartment complex, located about 30 miles west of Oklahoma City, told The Oklahoman that his ex-wife lives in the unit that was surrounded by police on Monday.
Jason Garas said police told him a woman and children are the victims, but they did not give him any names, The Oklahoman reported.
Garas and his ex-wife were divorced on Dec. 10, according to court records. The couple have a 3-year-old daughter, Garas told the newspaper. The woman also has three children from two other relationships, Garas said.
Brown said more than a dozen OSBI agents were assisting in the investigation.
Police Chief Ken Brown didn't immediately return calls seeking comment.
Ok, so two women that had a bad day to say the least. The first one was running from the law, the second one was a victim.
I was thinking, what about if a woman was taking her children away from a bad situation, like the second story should have, but the murderer had the police track her down like the first woman?
Since I don't know, I am going to pretend that people are reading this blog (haha) and that one of them is in Law Enforcement. What stops that from happening.
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