Home Discord Chat
Go Back   ChiefsPlanet > Nzoner's Game Room
Register FAQDonate Members List Calendar

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 08-02-2011, 09:18 PM  
Fat Elvis Fat Elvis is offline
Sexiest Athlete
 
Fat Elvis's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2001
Casino cash: $-1928075
A question for you math/stats whizzes...

OK, so it has been many, many (many) years since I've had a statistics course so I've forgotten how to figure some pretty simple problems out. Because of my nearing senility, I was wondering if some of you folks could help clear the cobwebs.

Suppose I have a four sided die that is equally weighted; each side has a .25 probability of showing up on any roll. ( I know that I'm wording this wrong) How rolls would it take to say that a number did not appear for 2.57 standard deviations?

(I have a couple more questions as well, but I will wait for an explaination for this question first)

Thanks

Fat E
Posts: 12,700
Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 04:28 AM   #16
TimeForWasp TimeForWasp is offline
Sprinkle in some Mahomes
 
TimeForWasp's Avatar
 

Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Butte Montana
Casino cash: $7658507
Wow , what a question. I was lost at OK,
Posts: 8,271
TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.TimeForWasp has an IQ even higher than Frankie's.
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 04:29 AM   #17
DanT DanT is offline
Veteran
 

Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Davis, CA
Casino cash: $1751711
Quote:
Originally Posted by Third Eye View Post
My best guess, given the wording, is that we are working with a geometric distribution with p=.25 and trying to determine the minimum number of trials it will take for a first success that occurs more than 2.57 standard deviation away from the mean. The mean for a geometric distribution is 1/p, so 1/.25=4. The variance is given by (1-p)/p^2 or .75/.0625=12. Thus the sd is 12^.5 or approximately 3.464. 2.57 sds is approximately equal to 8.9. So, to be at least 2.57 sds away from the mean you need at least 4 + 9 rolls, or 13.
Very nice. This could well be an answer to the original problem that Fat Elvis is trying to solve and it's the sort of alternative answer that I had in mind when I mentioned negative binomial distributions (of which the geometric distribution is a special case). It's why it's important to know what that problem's wording really is, because the problem as translated to the topic thread header is a little bit weird and seems to be lacking some crucial details.

The last sentence of the problem as posed by Fat Elvis is

"How rolls would it take to say that a number did not appear for 2.57 standard deviations?"

Let me just make a couple of comments about where you have interpreted that sentence of the problem differently than I have.

You are interpreting the problem to mean that the problem concerns the situation where the die roller has a particular value for the die in mind (e.g. a value of 3 dots) and is concerned about the number of throws of the die that could occur before that number first comes up. This is a reasonable interpretation. It leads to the crucial decision that the relevant standard deviation is for a geometric distribution with parameter p=0.25 and not the standard deviation for a discrete uniform distribution on the integers from 1 to 4. This matters a lot of course because those two distributions have different standard deviations. Your calculation of the standard deviation for the distribution you picked is indeed correct. Now keep in mind that there are two different versions of geometrically distributed variables, one counts just the number of failures until the first success, the other counts the total number of throws, including the throw with the success, so it is always bigger by 1. You are using the latter version, the one that Wikipedia denotes with the letter X to distinguish it from the other version, which it labels with a Y:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric_distribution

X & Y have different means, of course, because X is Y+1, but they have the same standard deviation. This is pertinent to Fat Elvis problem because you are assuming that you are also assuming that the target value is 2.57 sd away from the mean, not just simply 2.57 sd. Note that the problem as translated by Fat Elvis doesn't have the phrase "away from the mean" in it. Still, I think this could be that the original problem, the one that Fat Elvis translated to the topic threader could have included that phrase. If it didn't, then under your interpretation of the problem one would simply report 9 as the value, not 9 + 4 as the value, an easy fix.

Man, no wonder statistics is so confusing to students. The wording of the problem really matters a lot!

Last edited by DanT; 08-03-2011 at 08:10 AM..
Posts: 4,340
DanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby Piscitelli
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 06:15 AM   #18
BigRichard BigRichard is offline
Buddy Christ is a Chiefs fan
 
BigRichard's Avatar
 

Join Date: Nov 2008
Casino cash: $-1700454
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fat Elvis View Post
Could you explain how you arrived at that? Thanks.
I think I can help you with this one, he took the standard deviation of this thread... http://chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthrea...ght=solve+math.

He then cross multiplied it with a filter evasion.

At that point you add 1.21 gigawatts to the flux capacitor and voila, you have your answer.
__________________
"You know, they lay down with their ugly wives in front of their ugly children and just look at their loser lives and then they look at me and say, "I CAN'T PROCESS IT!" Well, no, and you never will. Stop trying. Just sit back and enjoy the show .... You know?"

Carlos Irwin Estevez
Posts: 11,295
BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.BigRichard is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 09:26 AM   #19
Dayze Dayze is offline
Resident Glue Sniffer
 
Dayze's Avatar
 

Join Date: Nov 2003
Casino cash: $1949358
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bugeater View Post
That's exactly what I was thinking.
me too....

Posts: 37,452
Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dayze is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 10:22 AM   #20
Fat Elvis Fat Elvis is offline
Sexiest Athlete
 
Fat Elvis's Avatar
 

Join Date: Apr 2001
Casino cash: $-1928075
Quote:
Originally Posted by DanT View Post
Hi Fat Elvis,

The problem involves a discrete distribution that puts 25% probability on each of the integers from 1 to 4. The course materials should have provided you a formula for computing the standard deviation for such a distribution, right? If you were to plot the density of that distribution, you will see that it looks nothing like a normal curve. Instead, the distribution puts the same amount of weight on each of only 4 points. You can compute the standard deviation for the problem's discrete uniform distribution using the formula you have for a standard deviation for a discrete probability distribution. (Alternatively, you can simply use one of the two Excel's functions for calculating POPULATION standard deviations and apply that to the four integers, like this:

=stdevp(1,2,3,4)
)

If you do that, you will learn what the population standard deviation is for that distribution. Once you know that, then you just need to compute what 2.57 of those standard deviations would equal. Then you just need to find the next greatest integer, aka the ceiling, aka the minimum integer whose value is at least as big as 2.57 * SD, where SD is the standard deviation whose value you computed at the beginning of the problem.

If I'm interpreting that problem correctly, I suspect that the intent of the problem is to help the student get familiar with translating a word problem into a math problem and then apply concepts you learned early in the class about standard deviations and other parameters that describe key features of distributions.

Hope this helps gets you started on the other problems!
DanT-

I really appreciate your help. It was late last night (late for me), so I really wasn't expressing myself very clearly. I'm not in a class now, and it has been over 25 years since I've taken a stats/probability class, so I've forgotten most everything. I think that is why the wording is pretty wonky. I was just looking at some old D&D dice that I had stumbled across while working in the basement, and for some reason it had me thinking about stats and probability. I think I worded things the way that I had because, in my mind, I was trying to generalize the concepts beyond the die/dice.

Perhaps you can clear some things up for me since my addled brain is a bit foggy. Lets assume that an event has a .25 probability of occuring; would the population size affect the mean and standard deviation? Perhaps it only affects variance? The smaller the population size, the greater the variance? This would be due to the Central Limit Theorem, correct?

I think Third Eye was getting what I was asking; I just did a poor job of asking the question. I have more questions though; I just need to relearn how to crawl before I start walking again with this....
Posts: 12,700
Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 10:40 AM   #21
Dartgod Dartgod is offline
Wasted away again...
 
Dartgod's Avatar
 

Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: in Margaritaville
Casino cash: $3810000
A 4 sided die? What kind of two-dimensional world do you live in? I'll bet that thing is a bitch to play craps with.
__________________
If you shed a tear for me, please make it a tear of joy.
-Joe Tracy (Nzoner)
.
.

<a href=http://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=275537 target=_blank><img src=http://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/signaturepics/sigpic126_7.gif border=0 alt= /></a>
Posts: 52,170
Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.Dartgod is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 12:34 PM   #22
DanT DanT is offline
Veteran
 

Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Davis, CA
Casino cash: $1751711
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fat Elvis View Post
DanT-

I really appreciate your help. It was late last night (late for me), so I really wasn't expressing myself very clearly. I'm not in a class now, and it has been over 25 years since I've taken a stats/probability class, so I've forgotten most everything. I think that is why the wording is pretty wonky. I was just looking at some old D&D dice that I had stumbled across while working in the basement, and for some reason it had me thinking about stats and probability. I think I worded things the way that I had because, in my mind, I was trying to generalize the concepts beyond the die/dice.

Perhaps you can clear some things up for me since my addled brain is a bit foggy. Lets assume that an event has a .25 probability of occuring; would the population size affect the mean and standard deviation? Perhaps it only affects variance? The smaller the population size, the greater the variance? This would be due to the Central Limit Theorem, correct?

I think Third Eye was getting what I was asking; I just did a poor job of asking the question. I have more questions though; I just need to relearn how to crawl before I start walking again with this....
In answer to your questions, you have to bear in mind that there is an important distinction between the population mean and the population standard deviation and the sample mean and the same standard deviation. The parameters that describe the population distribution are fixed constants that may or may not be known to the investigator. You asked me to suppose that an event has a 0.25 probability of occurring. OK, well you are now telling me the relevant POPULATION distribution--a Bernoulli with a probability of success of 0.25. Once I know that, I can compute the population mean, which will be 0.25 and the population standard deviation, which will be the square root of the variance, which equals the square root of 0.25 * ( 1 - 0.25 ).

Now, in real life, we often don't know what the parameters are for the relevant population distribution. We simply have access to a sample of observations from that distribution. We can use the sample to produce estimates of the unknown population parameters. Two such estimates are the sample mean and the sample standard deviation. These estimators have sampling distributions associated with them and those distributions do indeed depend on the sample size. Sample means based on a sample size of, say, 10, will vary more from sample to sample than would sample means based on a sample size of, say, 1000. The Central Limit Theorem pertains to the sampling distribution of the sample mean. It says that if the sample is from a population distribution that has a fixed finite mean and a finite population standard deviation, then the sampling distribution for the sample means can be approximated by a normal distribution, as the sample size gets larger and larger. So, for example, the Bernoulli distrbution has finite population means and standard deviations, so the Central Limit Theorem would apply to the sampling distribution of sample means for samples taken from that distribution. The sampling distribution for sample means based on a sample size of 10 will look sorta like a bell curve, if the population mean for the Bernoulli distribution is somewhere between, say, 0.30 and 0.70, but if you use sample sizes of 1,000 or more, then the sampling distribution for the means will really look very much like a bell curve, except for population means close to the edges, very low probability or very high probability events.
Posts: 4,340
DanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby Piscitelli
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 12:36 PM   #23
DanT DanT is offline
Veteran
 

Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Davis, CA
Casino cash: $1751711
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dartgod View Post
A 4 sided die? What kind of two-dimensional world do you live in? I'll bet that thing is a bitch to play craps with.
Posts: 4,340
DanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby Piscitelli
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 12:51 PM   #24
DanT DanT is offline
Veteran
 

Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Davis, CA
Casino cash: $1751711
Quote:
Originally Posted by DanT View Post
In answer to your questions, you have to bear in mind that there is an important distinction between the population mean and the population standard deviation and the sample mean and the same standard deviation. The parameters that describe the population distribution are fixed constants that may or may not be known to the investigator. You asked me to suppose that an event has a 0.25 probability of occurring. OK, well you are now telling me the relevant POPULATION distribution--a Bernoulli with a probability of success of 0.25. Once I know that, I can compute the population mean, which will be 0.25 and the population standard deviation, which will be the square root of the variance, which equals the square root of 0.25 * ( 1 - 0.25 ).

Now, in real life, we often don't know what the parameters are for the relevant population distribution. We simply have access to a sample of observations from that distribution. We can use the sample to produce estimates of the unknown population parameters. Two such estimates are the sample mean and the sample standard deviation. These estimators have sampling distributions associated with them and those distributions do indeed depend on the sample size. Sample means based on a sample size of, say, 10, will vary more from sample to sample than would sample means based on a sample size of, say, 1000. The Central Limit Theorem pertains to the sampling distribution of the sample mean. It says that if the sample is from a population distribution that has a fixed finite mean and a finite population standard deviation, then the sampling distribution for the sample means can be approximated by a normal distribution, as the sample size gets larger and larger. So, for example, the Bernoulli distrbution has finite population means and standard deviations, so the Central Limit Theorem would apply to the sampling distribution of sample means for samples taken from that distribution. The sampling distribution for sample means based on a sample size of 10 will look sorta like a bell curve, if the population mean for the Bernoulli distribution is somewhere between, say, 0.30 and 0.70, but if you use sample sizes of 1,000 or more, then the sampling distribution for the means will really look very much like a bell curve, except for population means close to the edges, very low probability or very high probability events.
I should have said that when we compute statistics on observations from a Bernoulli, we code Successes as a 1 and Failure as a 0. So the sample mean is really just the proportion of successes among all of the observations. (The population mean, on the other hand, is the probability that an observation--i.e. the next observation from the distribution, for example--will be a success.)
Posts: 4,340
DanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby Piscitelli
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 05:12 PM   #25
Fat Elvis Fat Elvis is offline
Sexiest Athlete
 
Fat Elvis's Avatar
 

Join Date: Apr 2001
Casino cash: $-1928075
Quote:
Originally Posted by DanT View Post
I should have said that when we compute statistics on observations from a Bernoulli, we code Successes as a 1 and Failure as a 0. So the sample mean is really just the proportion of successes among all of the observations. (The population mean, on the other hand, is the probability that an observation--i.e. the next observation from the distribution, for example--will be a success.)
I find this all very fascinating. I really appreciate your help and time explaining this to me.


When using a Bernoulli, would you use the same methods to calculate the observation of two (or three or more) successes (not necessarily consecutive)? Or is using a Bernoulli limited to coding a single success or failure?
Posts: 12,700
Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.Fat Elvis is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 07:30 PM   #26
DanT DanT is offline
Veteran
 

Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Davis, CA
Casino cash: $1751711
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fat Elvis View Post
I find this all very fascinating. I really appreciate your help and time explaining this to me.


When using a Bernoulli, would you use the same methods to calculate the observation of two (or three or more) successes (not necessarily consecutive)? Or is using a Bernoulli limited to coding a single success or failure?
The Wikipedia entries on mathematical topics tend to be quite reliable. The page on the Bernoulli distribution mentions the appropriate related distribution that applies to your question, which is the Binomial. The Bernoulli is for a single trial. The Binomial pertains to the number of successes observed in n independent trials from the same Bernoulli distribution.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernoulli_distribution

Last edited by DanT; 08-03-2011 at 08:56 PM..
Posts: 4,340
DanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby Piscitelli
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 07:35 PM   #27
CaliforniaChief CaliforniaChief is offline
#RIPAce
 
CaliforniaChief's Avatar
 

Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: So Cal
Casino cash: $10695899
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bugeater View Post
That's exactly what I was thinking.
Posts: 17,444
CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.CaliforniaChief is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 07:46 PM   #28
Extra Point Extra Point is offline
MVP
 
Extra Point's Avatar
 

Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Prairie Village, KS
Casino cash: $10004900
I'm imagining how DanT's posts would sound with the Hawking amplifier. Smart guy! Third Eye and Pawnmower, too. (No homo!)
__________________
"Sometimes I sits and thinks, and sometimes I just sits." --Satchel Paige
Posts: 7,845
Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.Extra Point Forgot to Remove His Claytex and Got Toxic Shock Syndrome.
    Reply With Quote
Old 08-03-2011, 09:00 PM   #29
DanT DanT is offline
Veteran
 

Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Davis, CA
Casino cash: $1751711
Quote:
Originally Posted by Extra Point View Post
I'm imagining how DanT's posts would sound with the Hawking amplifier. Smart guy! Third Eye and Pawnmower, too. (No homo!)
The Hawking amplifier remark reminds me of the funny Epic Rap Battle of History between him and Albert Einstein:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zn7-fVtT16k
Posts: 4,340
DanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby PiscitelliDanT 's adopt a chief was Sabby Piscitelli
    Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump




All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:27 AM.


This is a test for a client's site.
Fort Worth Texas Process Servers
Covering Arlington, Fort Worth, Grand Prairie and surrounding communities.
Tarrant County, Texas and Johnson County, Texas.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.