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15 Comments on this article:

Report as: spam offensive Tevya on 10/26/07 at 11am

What ever happened to putting huge, zoomed in photos of people smooching on the cover of the Daily and all over the website? I'm dispappointed that you, too have abandoned the traditions of tastelessness at the heart of FMOTQ.

Report as: spam offensive Co-term on 10/26/07 at 1pm

This was the lamest Full Moon in my five years at Stanford, and the blame rests almost solely on the upperclassmen. There were so many girls wandering around, begging to be kissed, and the senior guys were acting like it was a 7th grade dance. Pathetic. This tradition is going to die out if '09 doesn't lay down the lay next year and show the undergrads what the hell to do.

Report as: spam offensive So sad... on 10/27/07 at 1am

This event gets lamer and lamer every single year. I'll bet next year it'll just be a concert, and people can wear nametags and go about holding hands with strangers.

Report as: spam offensive anon on 10/27/07 at 2am

tevya, did you wonder if maybe they weren't able to get many pictures because there weren't enough people kissing?

Report as: spam offensive ME on 10/27/07 at 3am

Um, if anyone reads this who made out with a short girl with brownish hair and was wearing a short skirt- I have herpes and I made out with like 13 people and I feeel bad but I was drunk. So sorry

Report as: spam offensive ME on 10/27/07 at 3am

Um, if anyone reads this who made out with a short girl with brownish hair and was wearing a short skirt- I have herpes and I made out with like 13 people and I feeel bad but I was drunk. So sorry

Report as: spam offensive ME on 10/27/07 at 3am

Um, if anyone reads this who made out with a short girl with brownish hair and was wearing a short skirt- I have herpes and I made out with like 13 people and I feeel bad but I was drunk. So sorry

Report as: spam offensive ME on 10/27/07 at 3am

Um, if anyone reads this who made out with a short girl with brownish hair and was wearing a short skirt- I have herpes and I made out with like 13 people and I feeel bad but I was drunk. So sorry

Report as: spam offensive ME on 10/27/07 at 3am

Um, if anyone reads this who made out with a short girl with brownish hair and was wearing a short skirt- I have herpes and I made out with like 13 people and I feeel bad but I was drunk. So sorry

Report as: spam offensive ME on 10/27/07 at 3am

Um, if anyone reads this who made out with a short girl with brownish hair and was wearing a short skirt- I have herpes and I made out with like 13 people and I feeel bad but I was drunk. So sorry

Report as: spam offensive Well... on 10/27/07 at 1pm

Hey! You said you'd call me.

Report as: spam offensive Jeff Anderson on 10/29/07 at 6am

The breakdance performance was the best I´d ever seen before. Damned, who is that o'leven athlete presenting always outstanding head-spins? WOW. Forget the rest of the story, 'Full Moon' has happend on the stage only!!

Report as: spam offensive Albert Franklin on 10/29/07 at 9am

When it comes to the exterminations of Christians in Europe as well as blacks beginning 653 years ago, as it relates to Mexico's involvement beginning in 1521, as black Christians were also exterminated there, along with South American and the West Indies. "SHOULD CHRISTIANS OBSERVE HALLOWEEN?" by James L. Melton, http://www.biblebaptistpublications.org/ points to the Galic ALL SAINTS DAY, and its connection to Mexico's three days of DAYS OF THE DEAD, where Christians in America were sniffed out, as their Christian cross was given to Adolf Hitler in the form of the swastika.

Report as: spam offensive David McGalvin on 11/05/07 at 1am

Quite frankly, what went wrong with you, Albert Franklin?

Report as: spam offensive David McGalvin on 11/05/07 at 1am

Albert Franklin, the swastika is an equilateral cross with its arms bent at right angles, in either right-facing or left-facing forms. The term is derived from Sanskrit svasti, meaning well-being.
Archaeological evidence of swastika-shaped ornaments dates from the Neolithic period. An ancient symbol, it occurs in numerous indigenous Asian, European, African and Native American cultures; sometimes as a geometrical motif and sometimes as a religious symbol. It has long been widely used in major world religions such as Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism.
In 1920, the swastika was appropriated as a Nazi symbol and gained further association with the Third Reich over time. While the symbol was once commonly used without stigma, it has become controversial in some areas of the Western world because of this association.
You should better understand what is going on on that planet instead of praying b...s.... ! Thanks!




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