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Joints Hurt? Try This

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Anataflex)
Thu Oct 31 05:02:18 2013

Date: Thu, 31 Oct 2013 02:02:17 -0700
From: "Anataflex" <Anataflex@affotiveptain.us>
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu

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Say Goodbye to Achy Joints

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This undated photo provided by Blue Rider Press/Penguin shows award-winning 
journalist and war correspondent Michael Hastings.APThe Los Angeles Coroners 
Office says journalist Michael Hastings, who won fame writing the Rolling 
Stone article that ended General Stanley McChrystal's career, had drugs 
including amphetamines and marijuana in his system when he was killed in 
a fiery car crash in June.However, coroner's investigators said the drugs 
likely did not contribute to the crash, which they classified as an 
accident. Toxicology results showed small amounts of amphetamine in Hastings' 
blood, which indicated he had possibly taken methamphetamine many hours 
before his death. Traces of marijuana were also present, indicating he'd 
taken it hours earlier.Hastings cause of death was massive blunt force trauma, 
and the coroner determined he likely lost consciousness upon impact and 
died within seconds.The autopsy report came two months after Hastings' death 
on a deserted Los Angeles street fueled conspiracy theories and prompted 
the FBI to release an unusual statement that it had not been 
investigating him.Hastings died when his Mercedes, traveling at a high rate 
of speed, crossed into the median on Highland Avenue in Hollywood and 
struck a tree on June 18. The car burst into flames and 
Hastings' body was charred to the point that it took several days 
to positively identify him.The report states that Hastings had been "sober" 
for 14 years, but
Aug. 19, 2013: A small crowd as it gathers near Berth 3 
to watch the Celebrity Cruises' Millennium return to Ketchikan, Alaska.APCelebrity 
Cruises announced Tuesday is was cancelling the remainder of a seven-night 
cruise to Alaska after mechanical issues forced a ship carrying more than 
3,100 passengers and crew members to return to port in Ketchikan.The cruise 
line said in a statement that passengers would receive refunds of their 
cruise fares and chartered air travel home. It also said it was 
offering future cruise certificates for 100 percent of the fare paid for 
this cruise.Cynthia Martinez, a spokeswoman for Royal Caribbean Cruises 
Ltd., which owns Celebrity Cruises, said by email that about 2,200 guests 
and nearly 960 crew members were onboard the Millennium. She said Celebrity 
"will do whatever is necessary to get our guests back home, at 
no additional cost to them."Martinez said the 965-foot ship experienced 
a mechanical issue with one of its two propulsion motors. She said 
it could sail at a reduced speed with one motor, but "in 
an abundance of caution," the cruise line decided to cancel the sailing.The 
ship had an issue with the same motor on a prior outing, 
she said.Celebrity Cruises said the seven-night sailing began Friday, with 
the ship leaving Vancouver, British Columbia. Ketchikan, in southeast Alaska, 
was one of several ports of call scheduled before the cruise was 
to end in Seward.Coast Guard spokesman Kip Wadlow said 

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">PHOENIX  Tough-talking Arizona Sheriff Joe Arapio is warning civilians who 
embark on armed patrols in remote desert terrain that they could end 
up "seeing 30 rounds fired into them" by one of his deputies.His 
unapologetically terse comments came Tuesday after a member of an Arizona 
Minuteman border-watch movement was arrested over the weekend for pointing 
a rifle at a Maricopa County sheriff's deputy he apparently mistook for 
a drug smuggler.Court records say Richard Malley believed he had the right 
to aim the rifle at the deputy because he thought a crime 
was occurring. Malley was arrested for aggravated assault.He was released 
on $10,000 bail and is to appear in court Aug. 26. It 
wasn't clear if Malley had an attorney, and telephone numbers listed for 
him were disconnected.
  Award for magazine reporting for the McChrystal article, which 
was titled "The Runaway General."His story was considered responsible for 
ending McChrystal's career after it revealed the military's candid criticisms 
of the Obama administration.Hastings was also an author of books about the 
wars. "The Operators: The Wild and Terrifying Inside Story of America's 
War in Afghanistan" was published late last year and details shocking exploits 
of the military overseas.In 2010, with the publication of "I Lost My 
Love in Baghdad," Hastings told the story of being a young war 
correspondent whose girlfriend dies in Iraq.The Associated Press contributed 
to this report
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