[7996] in linux-announce channel archive
No More Crazy Dieting! Best Appetite Suppression Extract Here!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Garcinia Cambogia Extract)
Thu Sep 19 15:00:20 2013
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2013 12:00:19 -0700
From: "Garcinia Cambogia Extract" <GarciniaCambogiaExtract@fosearretbulan.us>
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100% Organic Weight Loss - Pure Garcinia Extract!
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To Unsub - http://www.fosearretbulan.us/2299/29/74/157/433.10tt71675797AAF10.html
PO Box 26452
Minneapolis, MN 55426
These photos released by the Stephens County Sheriffs Office show, left
to right, James Edwards Jr., Chancey Luna and Michael Jones.stephens county
sheriffs officeChristopher Lane, shown here in an undated photo, was attending
school in Oklahoma on a baseball scholarship when he was gunned down.AP/Essendon
Baseball ClubAug. 16, 2013: Sarah Harper,Christopher Lane's girlfriend,
stands beside a memorial along the road where police say Lane, an
Australian baseball player was shot and killed by three bored teenagers
who decided to kill someone for fun, in Duncan, Okla. Lane, who
was visiting Duncan where Harper and her family lives, had jogged past
a home where the boys were staying and that apparently led to
him being gunned down at random, said Police Chief Danny Ford.APProsecutors
on Tuesday charged two teenagers accused of gunning down an Australian student
in Oklahoma for the fun of it with first-degree murder, and a
third teen with being an accessory.Officials say 22-year-old Christopher
Lane, who was visiting the U.S. on a baseball scholarship at East
Central University, was jogging along a road in Duncan, Okla., after visiting
his girlfriend on Friday when he was shot in the back, allegedly
by the teens.Terri Moore from the Stephens County Courthouse says 16-year-old
Chancey Allen Luna and 15-year-old James Francis Edwards Jr. were charged
as adults with first-degree murder. Both are being held without bond.Bond
was set at $1 millio
his family believed he had started using drugs
again in the month before his death.According to investigators, the crash
occurred a day after Hastings returned from New York, where his wife
was living at the time, and hours before a brother was due
to join another family member in urging Hastings to go to detox.
Family members said Hastings had been using the hallucinogenic DMT recently,
though the drug was not detected in a blood test after the
crash.The names of family members who spoke to investigators were redacted
in the report.The report said a family member had last seen Hastings
passed out at home about three hours before the crash. The person
said Hastings had been smoking marijuana the night before the crash.Investigators
said Hastings was found after the crash with a medicinal marijuana identity
card in his wallet, and that the drug apparently was used to
ease post-traumatic stress disorder after his assignments in Afghanistan
and Iraq.The report also noted that Hastings had hit a pole while
driving several years ago and was possibly misusing Ritalin at the time.
He was later institutionalized for rehabilitative care.A family member told
investigators Hastings didn't have a history of suicide attempts but believed
he was invincible and could jump off a balcony and be fine.At
the time of his death, Hastings was working as a contributing editor
for Rolling Stone and wrote about politics for Buzzfeed.He won a 2010
George Polk
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> August 20, 2013: Kevin Reichel, left, of Reichel Funeral Home, watches along
with Steve Paul, of Freemansburg Pa., and his daughter Robyn Paul as
Lindsey Knupp, right, director of promotions and entertainment for the Lehigh
Valley Iron Pigs minor league baseball team, reads the winning essay written
by Steve Paul during the middile of the sixth inning at Coca-Cola
Park, in Allentown, Pa. (AP Photo)ALLENTOWN, Pa. Minor league baseball
clubs are known for staging unusual promotions and giveaways to draw fans
out to the ballpark. But the Philadelphia Phillies' top farm club took
giveaways to a whole new level on Tuesday, awarding a free funeral
to a fan recently diagnosed with ALS.Steve Paul, 64, of Freemansburg, Pa.
got a standing ovation as he was wheeled onto the field at
Coca-Cola Park in Allentown and announced as the recipient of a funeral
package from the Lehigh Valley IronPigs. The package includes a casket,
a choice of embalming or cremation, hearse, headstone, flowers and a funeral
or memorial service. The total value of the items involved: nearly $10,000.Kevin
Reichel, who owns Reichel Funeral Home in nearby Northampton, Pa., told
MyFoxPhilly.com he was initially hesitant about such a seemingly morbid
giveaway at a family event. However, he soon changed his mind."A baseball
game is a family setting and I think if you are going
to talk about your funeral or anything important in life, the first
people you turn to are family," Re
tory, about how her marriage fell apart
after 33 years and the "roller coaster" of opening her own business."I
told him, `OK, we all have situations in our lives," she said.
"It was going to be OK. If I could recover, he could,
too."Then Tuff said she asked the suspect to put his weapons down,
empty his pockets and backpack on the floor."I told the police he
was giving himself up. I just talked him through it," she said.A
woman answering the phone at a number listed for Hill in court
records said she was his mother but said it wasn't a good
time and rushed off the phone.Complicating the rescue, bomb-sniffing dogs
alerted officers to something in Hill's trunk and investigators believe
he may have been carrying explosives, Alexander said. Officials cut a hole
in a fence to make sure students running from the building could
get even farther away to a nearby street, he said.Police had strung
yellow tape up blocking intersections near the school while children waited
to be taken to Wal-Mart where hundreds of people were waiting. The
crowd waved from behind yellow police tape as buses packed with children
started arriving along the road in front of them at the store.
The smiling children waved back.Regional superintendent Rachel Zeigler used
a megaphone to say children were on the buses by grade level
and that each bus would also be carrying an administrator, a teacher
and a Georgia Bureau of Investigation officer. Relatives had to show ID,
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