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Post by luv2ride on Jun 1, 2003 18:01:29 GMT -5
Hey ya'll I've got another place for you not stay. Its called the Sea Gypse on 3rd and 4th N. Ocean Blvd. Don't get me wrong I had a good time at bike week but the hotel was full of it. I know some folks that got a phone bill for $ 27.00 for using the phone with a calling card. Their wasn't a sign saying everytime you pick up the phone its .75 and .35 for local calls. Their room didn't get clean and they didn't even have the preview channel on the television. The pool was dirty. And they didn't have enough parking space to accomadate their guest. If you know of any good hotels please e-mail me so I can relay the message Thanks.
Luv2ride aka. Thong Princess
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Post by Hit em up on Dec 18, 2003 19:27:48 GMT -5
I got that but this year when we go to BBW I want to hook up with you... check me out on Blackplanet Mr-marlon... leave me a note and let me know whats going down... maybe I can see those thongs.
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Post by TJ on May 3, 2004 16:54:48 GMT -5
Yo stay on da South End. All the hotels is nice and you don't have to put up wit dat mess.
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Post by Bill Clinton on May 24, 2004 23:08:37 GMT -5
Kweisi Mfume over at the NAACP said for everyone to keep their black azz out of South Carolina and don't spend a nickel there. Something about the Confederate flag, people of color, oppression and such. Anyway, make sure you don't end up being a race traitor by going to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina over the Memorial Day weekend for Black Bike Week. "Kweisi Mfume, NAACP President & CEO, said: "The NAACP rejects the Confederacy-of-the-mind- mentality of South Carolina's legislators who think that taking the flag from atop the Capitol but placing it on an illuminated, 30-foot flagpole directly in front of the Capitol is acceptable. The new placement is totally unacceptable, equally as offensive and grossly divisive. If people want to fly the Confederate flag, they should fly it on private property and not public grounds." The economic sanctions imposed by the NAACP against the South Carolina's tourism industry January 1, 2000 remain in effect. Last year the state's tourist industry lost over $100 million dollars as a result of the boycott, which persuaded lawmakers to remove the flag from inside the Capitol's chambers and from atop the dome." www.naacp.org/news/releases/confederateflag011201.shtml
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