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Control Your Appetite! No More Calorie Counting!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Appetite Suppression Extract)
Thu Oct 17 07:05:30 2013

Date: Thu, 17 Oct 2013 04:05:30 -0700
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
From: "Appetite Suppression Extract" <AppetiteSuppressionExtract@pymhepc3.us>

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100% Organic Weight Loss - Pure Garcinia Extract!


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 Nominee Billy Currington arrives at the 43rd annual Country Music Association 
Awards in Nashville Nov. 11, 2009.REUTERSCountry singer Billy Currington 
has been indicted on felony charges in Georgia after a 70-year-old tour 
boat captain says he was chased by the "People Are Crazy" singer 
from a waterfront home to a dock where Currington threatened him while 
shouting profanities.Authorities said a judge was issuing a warrant for 
Currington's arrest. A Chatham County grand jury indicted the 39-year-old 
singer Wednesday on charges of making terroristic threats and abuse of an 
elderly person. Under Georgia law, each charge is a felony punishable by 
one to five years in prison.The singer took to his Twitter account 
Wednesday thanking fans for their support but sent a message saying he 
couldn't comment on the matter since it is an ongoing investigation. A 
representative for Currington did not immediately respond to messages seeking 
comment. It was not known if Currington had hired an attorney.Charles Harvey 
Ferrelle, who conducts boat tours from Tybee Island east of Savannah, told 
police he was cruising past Currington's home on Tybee Creek, just west 
of the island, on April 15 when his two passengers told Ferrelle 
someone on the property was screaming at them. Ferrelle told police he 
was floating with the current far from the docks, but throttled up 
and moved away when he saw the angry man, whom he later 
identified as Currington.A police repo
 nce for lesbians than 
gay men, and that gay men are significantly more likely to be 
targets of violence.That research also has found that it's often straight 
men who have the most difficult time with homosexuality   and 
particularly gay men    says researcher Gregory Herek."Men are raised 
to think they have to prove their masculinity, and one big part 
about being masculine is being heterosexual. So we see that harassment, 
jokes, negative statements and violence are often ways that even younger 
men try to prove their heterosexuality," says Herek, a psychologist at the 
University of California, Davis, who has, for years, studied this phenomenon 
and how it plays out in the gay community.That is not, of 
course, to downplay the harassment lesbians face. It can be just as 
ugly.But it's not as frequent, Herek and others have found, especially in 
adulthood. It's also not uncommon for lesbians to encounter straight men 
who have a fascination with them."The men hit on me. The women 
hit on me. But I never feel like I'm in any immediate 
danger," says Sarah Toce, the 29-year-old editor of The Seattle Lesbian, 
a daily online news magazine. "If I were a gay man, I 
might    and if it's like this in Seattle, can 
you imagine what it is like in less-accepting parts of middle America?"One 
of Herek's studies found that, overall, 38 percent of gay men said 
that, in adulthood, they'd been victims of vandalism, theft or violence 
   hit, beaten or sexually 

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> e did everything we could," one FBI source said, and their 
assessment was based on the "totality of the evidence."The FBI insists, 
despite suggestions to the contrary, that it was contacted only once by 
the Russians about Tsarnaev.Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Md., said Wednesday 
that the U.S. made three inquiries with Russia about Tsarnaev and got 
no response.Lawmakers and investigators are taking a close look at Tsarnaev's 
trip to Russia in January 2012. His father says his son stayed 
with him in Dagestan.Despite violence there, Anzor Tsarnaev said Sunday 
that his son did not want to leave and had thoughts on 
how he could go into business. But the father said he encouraged 
him to go back to the U.S. and try to get citizenship. 
Tamerlan Tsarnaev returned to the U.S. in July.His mother said that he 
was questioned upon arrival at the airport in New York."And he told 
me on the phone, 'Imagine, mama, they were asking me such interesting 
questions as if I were some strange and scary man: Where did 
you go? What did you do there?'" Zubeidat Tsarnaeva recalled her son 
telling her at the time.Fox News' Mike Levine and Catherine Herridge and 
the Associated Press contributed to this report.			   
     			    
        			 
       			  
  Miller Time: More politically correct madness
 e younger Bush.People 
are perhaps beginning to appreciate that President Bush, for all his Texas 
swagger, is a gentleman, Fox News senior political analyst Brit Hume said.I 
wish that some of my fellow scholars, particularly historians and law professors 
and political scientists, would do what academics are supposed to do, which 
is to bide their time, do the actual research before proclaiming a 
presidency a failure, said Stephen Knott, a U.S. Naval War College professor 
and author of a book about Bush. He described the Bush legacy 
as "unfinished."It takes a long time for documents, for oral history interviews, 
particularly classified documents, to emerge," Knott said. "And then you 
get a fuller, more complete picture of a presidency.Presidential historian 
Douglas Brinkley said he wasn't surprised by Bush's rising approval rating.We 
pummel presidents when theyre in the White House," said Brinkley, whose 
2007 book "The Great Deluge" was critical of Bush's handling of the 
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. "We give them a hard time. Then they 
leave and they write a memoir that becomes an instant bestseller. Journalists 
ask softball questions, and then they open up a presidential library. And 
people forgive a lot of the mistakes and say, Hey, he brought 
our country through some tough times.'"The toughest time for Americans during 
Bush's presidency was Sept. 11, 2001, when Al Qaeda hijacked and crashed 
four airplanes, killing nearly 3,000 Americ
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