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Testoril - Longer lasting and harder erections! 65731829

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Testoril)
Mon Apr 14 08:00:38 2014

To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
Date: Mon, 14 Apr 2014 05:00:37 -0700
From: "Testoril" <Testoril@mgmbegirtajo.us>

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Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight!

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An emaciated man whose boat washed up on the shores of the 
Pacifics Marshall Islands is reportedly telling a harrowing tale of being 
adrift for 16 months, surviving on fish, birds, and turtle blood.The manwho 
only speaks Spanishsays he drifted more than 8,000 miles in his 24-foot 
fiberglass boat, after leaving Mexico for El Salvador in September 2012, 
the AFP reports. He had been traveling with a companion who he 
says died at sea several months ago.Two locals discovered the man Thursday 
when his boat with propeller-less engines floated onto the reef at Ebon 
Atoll. He has long hair and a beard, and was wearing only 
ragged underwear, the report said."His condition isn't good, but he's getting 
better," Ola Fjeldstad, a Norwegian anthropology student told AFP by phone. 
Fjeldstad is part of a group doing research on Ebon-- the southernmost 
outpost of the Marshall Islands-- who was helping the man.Its been difficult 
to get more details on the mans story because of a language 
barrier, but he told the researchers his name is Jose Ivan. He 
did say that he survived by eating birds and fish he caught 
with his bare hands, and drinking turtle blood when there was no 
rain.No fishing gear was found on the boat and Ivan suggested he 
caught turtles and birds with his bare hands. There was a turtle 
on the vessel when it landed at Ebon."The boat is really scratched 
up and looks like it has been in the water for a 
long time," Fjeldstad said.The locals wh
PARIS  Two high school classmates, both French Muslims, headed off to 
Syria this month instead of going to school. They were located, brought 
home   one fetched by his father    and 
are now being investigated on terrorism-linked charges.The unfolding drama 
of the teenagers, aged 15 and 16, highlights how Syria has become 
a magnet for a vulnerable fringe of young Muslims in the West. 
It is among a small wave of cases that are putting French 
authorities, and some families, on edge.The bloody three-year-old conflict 
in Syria has drawn thousands of Muslims to join the ranks of 
battalions trying to topple the regime or other fighting groups looking 
to conquer the region in the name of Islam.French authorities say that 
more than 600 French have gone to Syria, are plotting to go 
or have returned, and more than 20 French have been killed in 
fighting. As of mid-January, a dozen French adolescents were in Syria or 
in transit, according to authorities.Many of the alleged would-be jihadis 
are clearly amateurs."He's a victim. He's not a terrorist," said the father 
of the 15-year-old before his son was handed a preliminary charge linked 
to terrorism on Friday    a rare event for a 
minor. "He never touched a weapon," said the father, calling his son's 
trip "an error of youth."As the boys from France's southern Toulouse region 
were questioned Friday by a judge Friday, the trial of three French 
Muslims caught heading to Syria was concluding in another


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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">FoxNews.com reporter Jana Winter, right, and her attorneys won a victory 
when the New York Court of Appeals threw out a subpoena requiring 
her to go to Colorado and reveal sources for an exclusive story 
or face jail..AP Photo/Ed AndrieskiCENTENNIAL, Colo.  Lawyers for the man 
accused of killing 12 people at a Colorado movie theater said Friday 
they will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to require a Fox News 
reporter to reveal the confidential sources she used in a story about 
defendant James Holmes.The defense wants reporter Jana Winter to identify 
the law enforcement officials who told her that Holmes sent a notebook 
containing violent images to his psychiatrist before the 2012 attack.Holmes' 
lawyers say whoever spoke to Winter violated a gag order and should 
be punished. They also say that officers might have lied when they 
denied under oath being Winter's sources, undermining their credibility 
as potential trial witnesses.New York state's top court ruled in December 
that Winter did not have to testify in Colorado because she is 
protected by her home state's shield law, which says reporters do not 
have to identify confidential sources.A Colorado court issued a subpoena 
for Winter's testimony, but because she is based in New York, that 
state's courts would have to enforce it.Winter has said she would not 
identify the sources, even though the Colorado court could sentence her 
to jail for contempt of court for refusing.Winter's attorney, Dori 
 Jan. 31: Lidianette Carmona, behind right, the wife of the late boxer 
Christopher Rivera, stands with Rivera's family as they pose for photos 
taken by fans with Rivera's body propped up in a fake boxing 
ring during his wake at the community recreation center within the public 
housing project where he lived in San Juan, Puerto Rico.APSAN JUAN, Puerto 
Rico  Even in death, Christopher Rivera Amaro almost looked ready to 
box, leaning against the corner of a simulated ring.Mourners who came to 
his wake in San Juan on Friday found him posed afoot, a 
yellow hood on his head, sunglasses glasses over his eyes and blue 
boxing gloves on his hands.Elsie Rodriguez, vice president of the Marin 
Funeral Home, said Rivera's family wanted to stress his boxing. The funeral 
home suggested posing him in a ring.The makeshift ring was set up 
in a community center of a public housing complex. Rodriguez told The 
Associated Press it took them several hours to create the scene.The funeral 
home has staged similar wakes for others. One featured a deceased man 
riding his motorcycle.The 23-year-old Rivera had a 5-15 record in the 130-pound 
weight class. Police said he was shot dead Sunday in the city 
of Santurce. No one has been arrested.
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