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As of Friday, September 08, 2006 20:36:37 -0400 this is what we have on this specific dream drawing prediction.  If your able to help provide proof or information on this specific drawing, please click here to send me an email.  Please include the exact date of the dream or the DD number.  And again, thank you for your time, its very much appreciated.


DD3108



Additional information Post information on this DD  Chat about this DD with me Get email updates on this dream

Says "we are alive, room 6, school" not sure what the last word is.


2.19.2006

reply

Hi, posted, are you referring to the mudslide in the Philippines ?

Brian


 
http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/02/18/philippines.landslide/index.html
sorry ...should be going to bed...lol

reply

Thanks, so should I.
 
 
yes
here is a Link to CNN.com's reference to the school children....
--

2.19.2006

""Says "we are alive, room 6, school" not sure what the last word is."
Most probably relates to the Philippine landslide disaster - an elementary school was buried.
Star

reply

Thanks, will post this ASAP.

Brain


2.19.2006

Brian, I just saw your dream about "room 6, we are alive"...they are searching for survivors in a school in the Phillipines, where the mudslide buried 1500 people.  This made me think of the search for the school children.
Just my thought,
Casara
pameleacasara@charter.net

reply

Thanks, you maybe right, I hope they locate them.

Brian


2.20.2006Dear Brian,

Awesome!
In your dream, you must have heard the voices of the children at the school in Guinsaugon, the Philippines!

Sounds Heard at Philippines Landslide Site

By OLIVER TEVES, Associated Press Writer

GUINSAUGON, Philippines - Rescuers using high-tech equipment have detected sounds at the site of an elementary school buried by a landslide in the Philippines, but it was unclear whether they were made by people trapped inside or shifting mud, officials said Monday.

 

The search for survivors in the farming village of Guinsaugon had focused on the school because of unconfirmed reports that some of the 250-300 children and teachers believed trapped inside may have sent cell phone text messages to relatives soon after the disaster Friday.

However, no one has been rescued since the first hours after the landslide. Most of the 1,800 villagers were feared buried under the earth, boulders and trees that thundered down a rain-drenched mountain.

Rescuers said the noises might have come from shifting and settling mud covering the school. But the discovery offered a glimmer of hope to rescuers who had all but abandoned expectations of finding anyone alive.

"We know there's something down there," said U.S. Marine Lt. Richard Neikirk, pointing to a spot under a big boulder, where seismic sensors detected sounds. "The farther down we went, the signals grew stronger."

A Malaysian team using sound-detection gear picked up noises, too.

"We have a sound," said Sahar Yunos of the Malaysia Disaster and Rescue Team. "Knocking, something like that."

Workers were digging in two places. One — where the sounds were heard — is believed to be the original site of the school, close to the mountain that collapsed. The other is 200 yards down the hill, where the landslide could have carried the building.

There was no visible sign of the school, believed to be under some 115 feet of muck. Philippine Lt. Col. Raul Farnacio said teams had dug about half way down.

Dozens of U.S. Marines and Philippine soldiers, along with local miners, were digging in a watery spot, using shovels on the muck and moving it with body bags, while draining the murky fluid with large water bottles.

They deployed nine seismic sensors that can detect vibrations underground. With everyone standing still, one man used a steel bar to hit on a rock several times and waited for any kind of response from beneath the mud.

Four sensors detected some noise or vibration, but the men could not tell what it was. Rescuers radioed for water pumps and floodlights to keep working through the night.

A 15-man Malaysian team using sensor gear called Delsar employed similar techniques. Five Taiwanese, who brought heat-sensing equipment, were also checking for signs of life. A sniffer dog stopped three times at one spot near the digging.

In new international pledges of aid, South Korea said it would send $1 million, and New Zealand promised to give $133,000. Australia offered engineers to help assess the damage.

Rescuers have pulled out 76 bodies, but estimates varied on the number of survivors and people missing. Gov. Rosette Lerias of Southern Leyte province said Monday that 928 were missing. National disaster officials in Manila said the number of missing was 1,350, including 246 schoolchildren. Official have reported between 20 to 57 survivors. There was no immediate explanation for the discrepancies.

The search has been a painstaking process slowed by rain, shifting earth and fears of fresh landslides. Officials discussed turning the farming town of Guinsaugon into a massive cemetery, similar to other Asian areas ravaged by the 2004 tsunami.

Trapped survivors of past landslides or earthquakes have sometimes held out for days, communicating with search parties by calling out or tapping on rocks.

But hopes of finding people alive in Guinsaugon have seemed remote because the village was inundated by a dense wall of mud and rock, making it unlikely that many air pockets would form beneath the sodden surface.

Spain's canine association sent three dogs to join those already at the scene.

With no one left to claim the dead and bodies quickly starting to decompose in the tropical heat, victims were being buried in mass graves.

On Sunday, a Roman Catholic priest sprinkled holy water on 30 bodies laying side by side in a mass grave, some wrapped in bags, others in cheap wooden coffins, then said a prayer through a mask worn to filter out the stench.

The only witnesses were local health officials, the provincial governor, some of her staff and a few nearby residents. None knew the victims.

Two shiploads of U.S. Marines, diverted from joint military exercises elsewhere in the Philippines, joined rescue efforts Sunday. Helicopters ferried men and supplies to the site, and Marines surveyed roads and bridges to see if they could support the weight of heavy military vehicles and equipment.http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060220/ap_on_re_as/philippines_landslide

Regards,
Eriko Saeki
 

reply

I hope so,

Brian


2.21.2006Dear Brian,

And they were rescued!

reply

Wonderful news
 

Rescuers pull 50 alive from Filipino school: official
MANILA (Reuters) - Rescuers pulled 50 survivors from a school in the central Philippines on Monday, three days after their village was buried in a mudslide, an interior ministry official said on television.

U.S. marines recovered about 50 people from under the rubble at the school in Guinsaugon village, Marius Corpus, an undersecretary of the interior and local government department, told ABS-CBN.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060220/wl_nm/philippines_landslide_dc_13;_ylt=ArX3UnGkVgZpWhiT8B.EN6L9xg8F;_ylu=X3oDMTA2ZGZwam4yBHNlYwNmYw--

Regards,
Eriko Saeki
 

2.21.2006

Dear Brian,

The rescue people in the Philippines have located an area where they hear sounds coming from. See article below:

Nora

 

reply

Hi Nora, was just told that 50 people were rescued.

Brian


Signs of Life' Heard in Buried School

By OLIVER TEVES, Associated Press Writer 59 minutes ago

GUINSAUGON, Philippines - High-tech gear detected "signs of life" Monday at the site of an elementary school buried under mud that swept down a hillside soaked by rain in the eastern Philippines, the provincial governor said.

Sounds of scratching and a rhythmic tapping were picked up by seismic sensors and sound-detection gear brought in by U.S. and Malaysian forces, said South Leyte Gov. Rosette Lerias. Generator-powered lights were set up to allow teams of rescue workers to dig through the sludge during the night.

"To me, that's more than enough reason to smile and be happy," Lerias said. "The adrenaline is high ... now that we have seen increasing signs of life."

The search for survivors in the farming village of Guinsaugon had focused on the school because of unconfirmed reports that some of the 250-300 children and teachers believed trapped inside may have sent cell phone text messages to relatives soon after Friday's disaster.

No survivors had been found by Monday night, said U.S. Marine Capt. Burrell Parmer, who spoke to Marines at the site. Most of the 1,800 villagers were feared buried under the earth, boulders and trees that thundered down a rain-drenched mountain. A few survivors were pulled out in the first hours after the disaster.

Rescuers said the noises might have come from shifting and settling mud covering the school. But the discovery offered a glimmer of hope to rescuers who had all but abandoned expectations of finding anyone alive.

"We know there's something down there," said U.S. Marine Lt. Richard Neikirk, pointing to a spot under a big boulder, where seismic sensors detected sounds. "The farther down we went, the signals grew stronger."

A Malaysian team using sound-detection gear picked up noises, too.

"We have a sound," said Sahar Yunos of the Malaysia Disaster and Rescue Team. "Knocking, something like that."

Workers were digging in two places. One — where the sounds were heard — is believed to be the original site of the school, close to the mountain that collapsed. The other is 200 yards down the hill, where the landslide could have carried the building.

There was no visible sign of the school, believed to be under some 115 feet of muck. Philippine Lt. Col. Raul Farnacio said teams had dug about half way down.

Dozens of U.S. Marines and Philippine soldiers, along with local miners, were digging in a watery spot, using shovels on the muck and moving it with body bags, while draining the murky fluid with large water bottles.

They deployed nine seismic sensors that can detect vibrations underground. With everyone standing still, one man used a steel bar to hit on a rock several times and waited for any kind of response from beneath the mud.

Four sensors detected some noise or vibration, but the men could not tell what it was. Rescuers radioed for water pumps and floodlights to keep working through the night.

A 15-man Malaysian team using sensor gear called Delsar employed similar techniques. Five Taiwanese, who brought heat-sensing equipment, were also checking for signs of life. A sniffer dog stopped three times at one spot near the digging.

In new international pledges of aid,
South Korea said it would send $1 million, and New Zealand promised to give $133,000. Australia offered engineers to help assess the damage.

Rescuers have pulled out 76 bodies, but estimates varied on the number of survivors and people missing. Lerias said Monday that 928 were missing. National disaster officials in Manila said the number of missing was 1,350, including 246 schoolchildren. Official have reported between 20 to 57 survivors. There was no immediate explanation for the discrepancies.

The search has been a painstaking process slowed by rain, shifting earth and fears of fresh landslides. Officials discussed turning the farming town of Guinsaugon into a massive cemetery, similar to other Asian areas ravaged by the 2004 tsunami.

Trapped survivors of past landslides or earthquakes have sometimes held out for days, communicating with search parties by calling out or tapping on rocks.

But hopes of finding people alive in Guinsaugon have seemed remote because the village was inundated by a dense wall of mud and rock, making it unlikely that many air pockets would form beneath the sodden surface.

Spain's canine association sent three dogs to join those already at the scene.

With no one left to claim the dead and bodies quickly starting to decompose in the tropical heat, victims were being buried in mass graves.

On Sunday, a Roman Catholic priest sprinkled holy water on 30 bodies laying side by side in a mass grave, some wrapped in bags, others in cheap wooden coffins, then said a prayer through a mask worn to filter out the stench.

The only witnesses were local health officials, the provincial governor, some of her staff and a few nearby residents. None knew the victims.

Two shiploads of U.S. Marines, diverted from joint military exercises elsewhere in the Philippines, joined rescue efforts Sunday. Helicopters ferried men and supplies to the site, and Marines surveyed roads and bridges to see if they could support the weight of heavy military vehicles and equipment.
 


2.21.2006Dear Brian,

Hi, the prior news article turned out to be false.

reply

I hope they find someone soon, and have posted the new information.



Landslide Rescue Reports Denied


Monday February 20, 12:47 PM

The US military has denied reports that 50 survivors have been pulled alive from a school buried in a massive landslide in the Philippines. Local media had claimed the survivors were rescued from 115ft of mud in the village of Guinsaugon.

US Marine Capt Burrell Parmer said he had spoken to the commander of US forces digging at the site.

"They have yet to receive any word on any type of survivors," he said.

"I asked for specifics, and I asked had they received or found any type of survivors, and the answer was no."
 Thousands of people are feared to have died in Friday's disaster.

Rescuers were using hi-tech equipment to locate any possible survivors.

The search is focused on the school in Guinsaugon.

There have been unconfirmed reports that some of the 250-300 children and teachers may have sent text messages to relatives soon after the disaster.So far, 84 bodies have been recovered from the village. Relatives have reported 1,371 villagers still missing.
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/20022006/140/landslide-rescue-reports-denied.html

Regards,
Eriko Saeki


2.21.2006

In the village of Guinsaugon where the mud cover all the houses and school on the 20 feb.2006. It would make since in my book. Since the school in under the mud! And they hope to find survivors.

Pierre.
 

reply

I hope so too, please keep me informed.

Brian


2.23.2006

Hi Sarge,
It is just me.. I was going back over your dreams for recent events and one caught my attention.. earlier you said " we are alive in room 6 at school and then about 3 weeks later there is the mud slide with the kids buried it appears and I will bet that they find the kids in room 6 of the school just as your prior dream said.. there was no mud slide or danger at that time to kids and now there has been and this prior dream now makes sense.. lets see if they say they find the kids in room 6..
You pal
John101st

reply

Hi John, I hope they find someone...but this dream may mean something else.

Brian


2.27.2006

Brian I don’t know how the numbers run, but is this the mudslide in South America where the school was buried ?  Some new channel had interviews and the Spanish in the background said the kids were calling on cell phones for someone to get them out.

reply

Hi, thanks and I have posted your comments.

Brian



 




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