[9448] in linux-announce channel archive
Vydox - Stronger erections enough to drive your partner crazy!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Vydox)
Sun Jan 26 15:04:21 2014
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@affotiveptain.us>
Date: Sun, 26 Jan 2014 12:04:21 -0800
From: "Vydox" <Vydox@affotiveptain.us>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
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Vydox can get you the erection of your life! Check!
http://www.affotiveptain.us/3862/126/260/1098/2342.10tt71675797AAF24.php
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WASHINGTON One of three college students arrested Wednesday in the Boston
Marathon bombings case was allowed to return to the United States from
Kazakhstan in January despite not having a valid student visa, a federal
law enforcement official told The Associated Press.Authorities charged the
student -- a friend and classmate of one of the men accused
of setting off the deadly explosions -- with helping after the attacks
to remove a laptop and backpack from the bombing suspect's dormitory room
before the FBI searched it.The government acknowledged that U.S. Customs
and Border Protection was unaware that the student was no longer in
school when he was let back into the United States.The disclosure was
another instance of possible lapses by the federal government in the months
before the Boston bombings. The Obama administration earlier this week announced
an internal review of how U.S. intelligence agencies shared sensitive information
and whether the government could have disrupted the attack. Republicans
in Congress have promised oversight hearings starting next week.Federal
authorities on Wednesday arrested three college friends of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev,
a bombing suspect, including Azamat Tazhayakov, a friend and classmate of
Tsarnaev's at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. Tazhayakov left
the U.S. in December and returned Jan. 20. But in early January,
his student-visa status was terminated because he was academically dismissed
ge
questioned how he was able to return to the U.S. in January.
A lawyer for Tazhayakov said he had re-enrolled in the university with
a different major after returning to the country.International students
who aren't enrolled or are dismissed from a college or university generally
have 30 days to rectify their status and re-enroll as long as
they are already in the United States.Lawmakers have questioned information
sharing among U.S. law enforcement before the bombings. In 2011, Russian
officials notified the FBI and CIA that they were concerned about now-deceased
bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev. In early 2012 Homeland security was alerted
of Tamerlan Tsarnaev's travel to and from Russia -- information that was
shared with Boston's joint terrorism task force. But the FBI investigation
into him had closed and therefore he didn't warrant additional scrutiny,
officials have said.
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<strong><center><a href="http://www.affotiveptain.us/3862/126/260/1098/2342.10tt71675797AAF18.php"><H3>Vydox can get you the erection of your life! Check!</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">March 8, 2012: Florida Gov. Rick Scott delivers his state of the
state speech to the Florida legislature in Tallahassee.APTALLAHASSEE, Fla.
Gov. Rick Scott vetoed a bill late Wednesday that would have
ended permanent alimony in Florida.Scott vetoed the measure (SB 718) just
four hours before the midnight deadline to approve or veto it. The
bill automatically would have become law if Scott had done nothing by
then.If it had become law, Florida would have become the fifth state
to abolish permanent alimony.In a letter to Senate President Don Gaetz,
Scott commended bill sponsors Ritch Workman in the House and Kelli Stargel
in the Senate -- both Republicans -- and said there are "several
forward looking elements of this bill."But alimony "represents an important
remedy for our judiciary to use in providing support to families as
they adjust to changes in life circumstances," Scott wrote. "As a husband,
father and grandfather, I understand the vital importance of family."Scott
could not "support this legislation because it applies retroactively and
thus tampers with the settled economic expectations of many Floridians who
have experienced divorce," he wrote. "The retroactive adjustment of alimony
could result in unfair, unanticipated results."Florida law "already provides
for the adjustment of alimony under the proper circumstances," Scott wrote.
"The law also ensures that spouses who have sacrificed their careers to
raise a family do not s
JOHANNESBURG Mozambique's rhinoceros population was wiped out more than
a century ago by big game hunters. Reconstituted several years ago, it
has again been driven to extinction, or to the brink of extinction,
by poachers seeking their horns for sale in Asia.A leading rhino expert
told The Associated Press that the last rhino in the southern African
nation has been killed. The warden in charge of the Great Limpopo
Transfrontier Park the only place where the horned behemoths lived
in Mozambique also says poachers have wiped out the
last of the rhinos. Mozambique's conservation director believes a few may
remain.Elephants also could become extinct in Mozambique soon, the warden
of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, Antonio Abacar, told AP. He said
game rangers have been aiding poachers, and 30 of the park's 100
rangers will appear in court soon."We caught some of them red-handed while
directing poachers to a rhino area," Abacar said.A game ranger arrested
for helping poachers in Mozambique's northern Niassa Game Reserve said on
Mozambican Television TVM last week that he was paid 2,500 meticais (about
$80) to direct poachers to areas with elephants and rhinos. Game rangers
are paid between 2,000 and 3,000 meticais ($64 to $96) a month.While
guilty rangers will lose their jobs, the courts serve as little deterrent
to the poachers: killing wildlife and trading in illegal rhino horn and
elephant tusks are only misdemeanors in Mozam
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