NoelarBear
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2019
- Messages
- 483
- Reaction score
- 1,369
- Points
- 93
BleedGopher in mid-season form! LOL!!Game day prep means different things in Lincoln than it does Dinkytown.
Go Gophers!!
But the vape pens are for everyone, or so he thought.
All caps didn’t work. They should look into larger font or bold font on the “STEALING” part.Nebraska needs a sign I guess:
Honestly, I think it needs to be in pictures...All caps didn’t work. They should look into larger font or bold font on the “STEALING” part.
I used to have another pic from another school (also red but not Nebraska) where they clearly chose to add "women" to their respect line after the fact. Probabbly after some incodents.All caps didn’t work. They should look into larger font or bold font on the “STEALING” part.
Honestly, I think it needs to be in pictures...
Steal one Get oneBut the vape pens are for everyone, or so he thought.
So its not THAT he stole, it's WHAT he stole. And not being smart enough to realize there would be an alarm system.Very sad story, the pathos of ruining your life for stealing trash and not being smart enough to realize a store like that is likely to have an alarm system.
Somehow this reads like…Nebraska needs a sign I guess:
Drugs with stolen weapons does sound dangerous.Somehow this reads like…
“Honestly… Treat women with NO respect! Drugs! Stealing! Weapons!”
Only if he is released, the charges are mysteriously dropped and he starts in the game on Thursday.Cornhusker player arrested? Maybe the glory days ARE back down there!
Have not heard of that happening, but I like your thinking. Prostitution is not legal in Clark County where Las Vegas is located, but it is in Nye County, about 40 miles away. I think that strip joints would be a better idea, there are tons of them, a couple are a 3-wood shot from Allegiant Stadium.semi-serious question:
in states where recreational pot is legal - would a college athlete be able to sign an NIL deal with a dispensary? Or a liquor store for that matter?
as long as the athlete is not using any substances that would violate team rules, in theory he or she should be free to sign any endorsement deals they want. another idea - a player from UNLV does an NIL deal with a legal brothel. if it's a legal business, why not?
Players deserve to be paid - schools making hundreds of millions off of them. I don't know how that issue relates to a utopian vision of conduct where every player is a pillar of their community (and smart).I thought paying the players would solve all the problems