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More info on what Testoril can make you do!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Testoril)
Sat Oct 19 19:05:02 2013

To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
Date: Sat, 19 Oct 2013 16:05:00 -0700
From: "Testoril" <Testoril@hoareowdrll.us>

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Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight!

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 said he "encouraged" him to move on 
export. He said Netanyahu was receptive but gave no time frame.The Tamar 
field was discovered in 2009 and holds an estimated 8.5 trillion cubic 
feet of gas. Leviathan, found in 2010, boasts an estimated 16 to 
18 trillion cubic feet and is expected to go online in 2016. 
Around that time, Israel is expected to begin exporting.Israel has yet to 
adopt an export policy for its natural gas reserves. A 2012 inter-ministerial 
report concluded that Israel should preserve enough natural gas for itself 
for 25 years, leaving about half of its estimated reserves for potential 
export. The discoveries are minimal compared to gas giants Russia, Qatar 
or Iran but the country's proximity to Middle Eastern and European markets 
could make it an important regional player.The consortium drilling off Israel's 
coast has been pushing for Israel to adopt the recommendations. They say 
until there is a decision, they are not able to move forward 
on financing the field's development, building infrastructure to transport 
the gas or securing global markets.There have been calls from some in 
Israel to minimize gas available for exports in order to ensure domestic 
supply.
e, Maine.  Proulx said he once chased Christopher 
Knight.  Knight, known as the North Pond Hermit, was arrested Thursday, 
April 4, 2013, while stealing food from another camp in Rome. Authorities 
said he may be responsible for more than 1,000 burglaries. (AP Photo/Robert 
F. Bukaty))The Associated PressROME, Maine  Cottage owners on a central 
Maine lake are expressing relief that a so-called hermit is no longer 
at large.Law enforcement officials say 47-year-old Christopher Knight lived 
in the woods for 27 years and may be responsible for more 
than 1,000 burglaries of food and other items. Authorities arrested Knight 
last week after he tripped a surveillance sensor while allegedly stealing 
food from a camp for special needs people.Authorities are sorting through 
Knight's lair in the woods, but the land's owner is turning away 
others who have hiked there to get a look.Among them was Frank 
Ten Broeck, a retired New Jersey police official who has a cottage 
nearby. Ten Broeck says it's "mind-boggling" that Knight could survive through 
Maine's severe winters for so long.

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">A Home Depot store is seen in New York, August 18, 2008. 
Analysts are expecting Home Depot to report a second-quarter profit of 61 
cents a share on Tuesday, compared with 77 cents a year earlier, 
according to Reuters Estimates. The industry leader has said per-share earnings 
could fall as much as 24 percent this year.   REUTERS/Shannon 
Stapleton (UNITED STATES)ReutersA man in a suburban Los Angeles Home Depot 
Wednesday evening used saws normally used to slice sheet rock to cut 
both his arms down to the bone in front of several horrified 
customers, police said.The man, who was not immediately identified, suffered 
severe injuries. He was found in a pool of blood in the 
store's tool section. He had a slight pulse but was passing out 
as help arrived."People just couldn't believe it," Cpl. Rudy Lopez, with 
West Covina Police Department, told KNBC-TV. "He walked into the saw area, 
picked up a couple of saws in the saw area and started 
cutting both of his arms."An off-duty paramedic from the Pasadena Fire Department 
had been shopping nearby and hurried to the scene.- Cpl. Rudy Lopez, 
with West Covina Police Department"The officers had already found the man 
down, face down, blood all over the store, multiple aisles, and the 
whole store is in chaos," the paramedic, Art Hurtado, told KNBC-TV.Hurtado 
thought the man was dead but when he checked he found breath 
and a slight pulse and said he thought to himself, "I can 
save this guy."With help fro
 ribes 
a rail line speeding nearly 100,000 people a day along a route 
connecting Venezuela's main port, Puerto Cabello, with Valencia and the 
country's other major central city, Maracay.She says it will be ready in 
2012.Yet not a single section is complete after a decade of construction.The 
railway may be the most visible symbol of unfulfilled promises in Chavez's 
14 years as president. It is the heart of his ambitious plan 
to create a network of lines across Venezuela, a nation that now 
has a sum total of 40 kilometers (25 miles) of operating tracks.In 
Maracay, three-story concrete pylons linked by monstrous girders parallel 
Venezuela's main central highway. The elevated rail bed halts abruptly at 
road crossings. There are phantom stations."This is going really slow," 
construction worker Anselmo Mendoza, 46, said while walking atop one section, 
its steel bolts, plates and rebar coated with rust. "There isn't any 
type of coordination."Mendoza has been on the job nine years. Most days, 
he and his co-workers try to keep busy with work often unrelated 
to actual construction.Billions have been spent so far on the 128-kilometer 
(80-mile) project.Transportation Ministry spokesman Alexis Cabrera was asked 
for information on construction delays and budgets. He said he would need 
to ask the minister for permission, but didn't call back.At campaign rallies, 
Capriles always rattles off a list of Chavez's unfinished projects.On Wednesday 
night in 
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