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Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight! 71675797

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Testoril)
Sun Mar 23 05:31:02 2014

To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Testoril" <Testoril@brenzacwpc.us>
Date: Sun, 23 Mar 2014 02:31:01 -0700

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Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight!

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UNDATED: Mary Musselman, of Sebring, Fla., is accused of violating her probation 
by feeding wildlife and resisting an officer with violence, authorities 
say.Highlands County Sheriff's OfficeAn 81-year-old Florida woman arrested 
last year for allegedly feeding bears was again arrested this week on 
suspicion of violating her probation by illegally feeding wildlife and threatening 
to kill a law enforcement officer.Mary Musselman, of Sebring, was arrested 
Wednesday by Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission agents after 
several bowls, trays and birdfeeders with corn feed and birdseed were found 
outside her home, HighlandsToday.com reported.Musselman was placed on probation 
Jan. 24 for two counts of feeding black bears, according to a 
court records obtained by the newspaper. As part of the terms of 
her probation, the former middle school teacher was ordered not to put 
out food for animals for a year.Gary Morse, spokesman for the commission, 
told HighlandsToday.com that officers had been dealing with Musselman since 
November 2012 after receiving a report that she fed bears. At lest 
one of the bears she allegedly fed was euthanized. He said feeding 
bears is a misdemeanor under Florida law.According to court documents, when 
Highlands County deputies and Fish and Wildlife agents tried to arrest her, 
Musselman lunged at them and kicked them, HighlandsToday.com reported.MyFoxTampaBay.com 
reported that a group of Musselman's former physical
An Alabama neurosurgeon was at Brookwood Medical Center when he was needed 
six miles away for emergency brain surgery at Trinity Medical Center.Dr. 
Zenko Hrynkiw set off in his car but a rare snowstorm locked 
down traffic and he didnt get farther than a few blocks.Dressed in 
his hospital scrubs, the 62-year-old got out of his car and walked 
the rest of the trip in freezing temperatures.He had a 90 percent 
chance of death, Hrynkiw said of the patient who had gone unconscious.Hrynkim 
said that if the patient did not have surgery he would have 
died, and thats not going to happen on my shift.Hrynkiw, Trinitys only 
brain surgeon told reporters that the trip really wasnt that big of 
a deal, according to AL.com.It was kind of a nice day for 
a walk, he said, describing the trip as kind of a fun 
journey.Steve Davis, the charge nurse in the neuro intensive care unit at 
Trinity had alerted authorities that Hrynkiw was walking.The police were 
looking for him, said Davis, but despite supposed sightings couldnt locate 
him and didn't make contact with him until hours later.He finally called 
me and said, Wheres the patient? Whats the status? Davis said.He spoke 
to the family and went off to surgery. The patient is reported 
to be doing well.The extreme weather Tuesday has been blamed for five 
deaths in Alabama and it stranded untold thousands away from their homes.Click 
for more from AL.com.The Associated Press contribute to this report.Vehicles 
backe

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">ittle we have to use later in the year, 
or even in future years."State Department of Water Resources Director Mark 
Cowin said there simply is not enough water in the system to 
meet the needs of farmers, cities and the conservation efforts that are 
intended to save dwindling populations of salmon and other fish throughout 
Northern California.For perspective, California would have to experience 
heavy rain and snowfall every other day from now until May to 
get the state back to its average annual precipitation totals, according 
to the Department of Water Resources."These actions will protect us all 
in the long run," Cowin said during a news conference that included 
numerous state and federal officials, including those from wildlife and 
agricultural agencies.Friday's announcement came after Gov. Jerry Brown's 
official drought declaration in mid-January, a decision that cleared the 
way for state and federal agencies to coordinate efforts to preserve water 
and send it where it is needed most. The governor urged Californians 
to reduce their water use by 20 percent.It also reflects the severity 
of the dry conditions in the nation's most populous state. Officials say 
2013 was the state's driest calendar year since records started being kept, 
and this year is heading in the same direction.A snow survey on 
Thursday in the Sierra Nevada, one of the state's key water sources, 
found the water content in the meager snowpack is just 12 percent 
of nor
 Hanswirth, 
didn't immediately return a call. Hanswirth previously expressed doubt that 
the Supreme Court would intervene.Holmes has pleaded not guilty by reason 
of insanity to multiple counts of murder and attempted murder, and prosecutors 
are seeking the death penalty.The identity of Winter's sources is not likely 
to influence the outcome of Holmes' case. But the defense's quest to 
identify them has dragged on for more than a year and drawn 
objections from Fox News and journalism organizations, who say it threatens 
reporters' ability to do their job.Defense attorneys have acknowledged that 
Holmes was the shooter but say he was in the midst of 
a psychotic episode. The crucial question awaiting jurors is whether he 
was insane, which means unable to tell right from wrong under Colorado 
law. If the verdict is insanity, Holmes would be committed indefinitely 
to the state mental hospital and could not be executed.Any evidence about 
his mental state -- such as the notebook -- could be important 
in persuading the jury. Authorities have confirmed Holmes sent the notebook, 
but the contents haven't been publicly confirmed.Holmes' trial date is up 
in the air as attorneys work their way through scores of pretrial 
motions.Holmes' lawyers revealed their plans to appeal to the Supreme Court 
at the end of a hearing on a defense motion to bar 
evidence from crime scene reconstruction experts. The defense said such 
evidence is unreliable.Also pending is
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