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daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (LTL)
Wed Dec 28 08:36:35 2016

Date: Wed, 28 Dec 2016 08:14:38 -0500
From: LTL <ltl@navyusaitem.com>
To:   <sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu>

------=_Part_1_115761563.1482930871484
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

The new military technology being released by the X700 Flashlight team in t=
he next few days is something you need to know about=C3=A2=E2=82=AC=C2=A6

Be one of the first civilians to get a heads-up before it's released to the=
 public=C3=A2=E2=82=AC=C2=A6

We are talking about the X700 LED Flashlight. (http://www.navyusaitem.com/5cfp86U4xDf_JM8TnvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONW61b/nebula-flatten

This picture is worth a thousand words, see for yourself below=C3=A2=E2=82=
=AC=C2=A6.

The first shipment was received three hours ago. You are part of the first =
batch of email recipients.

Last year - they sold their entire stock in 2 days! Do not miss out on this=
 rare opportunity.

Click here to claim your X700 LED Flashlight (http://www.navyusaitem.com/5cfp86U4xDf_JM8TnvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONW61b/nebula-flatten

FYI. If you reply to this email two days from now telling me they are all g=
one and asking how to get one dont be mad when I tell you, you ll have to w=
ait till next year.

Pick up your X700 LED Flashlight Now - You'll Love It (http://www.navyusaitem.com/5cfp86U4xDf_JM8TnvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONW61b/nebula-flatten

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If you wish to stop, please GO Here. (http://www.navyusaitem.com/6bfW86*5JUHx0J8PnvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONW34b/receipt-aeronautical

X700 Flashlight
3824 Cedar Springs Rd. #801-7488
Dallas, TX 75219

or 1720 S Hill rd Timmonsville Sc 29161-7831








































LAS VEGAS =C3=A2=E2=82=AC=E2=80=9D Nearly a half-century ago, Craig W. Ande=
rson took a highly visible stand against what he considered an unjust war. =
In 1967, he and three other Navy seamen walked away from their ship, the ai=
rcraft carrier Intrepid, when it docked in Japan after a bombing mission in=
 the Gulf of Tonkin, off the coast of Vietnam. Calling themselves "patrioti=
c deserters," they set off an unrelenting international manhunt. Aided by a=
 local pacifist group and hounded by United States and Japanese military po=
lice, the fugitives sneaked aboard a Siberia-bound Russian freighter and we=
re later taken to Moscow by hard-drinking K.G.B. agents. Called the "Intrep=
id Four," they were both hailed as heroes and condemned as cowards. Mr. And=
erson didn't see himself as a rabble-rouser, just a sincere, blue-collar ki=
d who had made a conscientious act against the continuing deaths of innocen=
t Vietnamese civilians. Continue reading the main story Advertisement Conti=
nue reading the main story He was
eventually arrested by the F.B.I. and served for several months in a milita=
ry prison before being released in November 1972 with a bad conduct dischar=
ge. For more than four decades, Mr. Anderson went into his own personal und=
erground. He bounced around North America, produced a movie, wrote country =
music and wrote mystery books under the pen name Will Hart while living in =
Mexico. He wasn't running, he said. "It was my past; it was private," he sa=
id. "I'd just decided to set it aside." Like many veterans who have survive=
d tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, he had returned from war emotional=
ly damaged. And he still struggles to confront the consequences of that cha=
pter of his life. Photo The Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum in New York la=
st month. Credit An Rong Xu for The New York Times Now Mr. Anderson, 69, ha=
s decided to speak out about his experience, in part to promote a memoir he=
 is writing. He wants other veterans to know what he went through, and hope=
s to rally a
new generation of Americans to take a more vocal stand against the nation's=
 current military campaigns. Mr. Anderson said he sees today none of the or=
ganized public protests against American war efforts so common on college c=
ampuses in his youth. Writing has unleashed some personal ghosts. "It was t=
orture," he said of the process. "It was like bleeding." A 'Patriotic' Dese=
rtion On the night of Oct. 23, 1967, the four Navy seamen stood on a busy T=
okyo street, approaching the end of a daylong shore leave. "I'm not going b=
ack," Mr. Anderson said. None of them were. They destroyed their ID cards a=
nd uniforms. In the eyes of the military, they had committed the unforgivab=
le sin. Mr. Anderson and John Barilla were 20, Richard Bailey and Michael L=
indner 19. Mr. Anderson's family's military roots dated to the Civil War, b=
ut he had attended Berkeley peace rallies and believed that the Vietnam War=
 was wrong. Yet he felt a duty to his mother and his grandmother to continu=
e the tradition
and serve. The four spent their first AWOL night in civilian clothes, sleep=
ing in a subway station and expecting the shore patrol to tap their shoulde=
rs at any moment. "They were conscious of the fact this was a big thing the=
y were doing," said Ernest Young, a professor emeritus of Chinese history a=
t the University of Michigan who met with them soon after they deserted. In=
 the days that followed, the deserters gave a taped interview to a Japanese=
 television producer and Mr. Anderson read a statement. Photo The Intrepid =
Four were applauded at a gathering at Moscow University on Nov. 22, 1967. F=
rom left, Boris Krainov, a Russian; Mr. Anderson; John M. Barilla; Michael =
Lindner; and Richard D. Bailey. Credit Associated Press "You are looking at=
 four deserters, four patriotic deserters from the United States Armed Forc=
es," he began. "Throughout history, the term 'deserter' has applied to cowa=
rds, traitors and misfits. We are not concerned with categories or labels. =
We have reached
the point where we must stand up for what we believe to be the truth." By t=
he time the video aired, the four men had left Japan. Seeking safety in a f=
oreign country, they were aided by an unlikely ally. With the assistance of=
 Russian officials, the men stowed away aboard the freighter Baikal, using =
visitor's passes supplied by the Soviet Embassy. They hid in the men's room=
 until the ship was out to sea, then presented themselves to a surprised ca=
ptain. Arriving at the Siberian port of Nahodka, they were met by K.G.B. ag=
ents, who poured them shots of vodka on the long trip to Moscow. For six we=
eks after arriving in Moscow, they were hailed as heroes, awarded the Lenin=
 Peace Prize as a theater full of Moscow University students chanted "Molod=
ets!" or "atta boy." Eventually, the four ended up in Sweden. But after thr=
ee years there, Mr. Anderson wanted to rebuild his life in America. He was =
able to pass through United States customs from Canada without a passport a=
nd arrived in
San Jose, Calif., to a frigid welcome. His mother had become an alcoholic, =
he said; his brother refused to speak to him. "He was outright against me,"=
 Mr. Anderson recalled. "We never repaired that." One morning, as he left h=
is San Francisco apartment to buy a newspaper, he was greeted by two men in=
 suits. "They said, 'Mr. Anderson?'" he said. "And I knew right away." He s=
pent nine months in a high-security brig on San Francisco's Treasure Island=
, often in solitary confinement, addressed only by his military number, B88=
7517. After he went on a hunger strike, Mr. Anderson was hospitalized for a=
 psychiatric assessment. Military prosecutors had wanted a four-year senten=
ce, but a judge released him with a bad conduct discharge. Photo Mr. Anders=
on's photograph is on display as part of an exhibit about the Intrepid Four=
 at the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum. Credit An Rong Xu for The New Yor=
k Times Mr. Anderson emerged another person. "I couldn't tolerate crowds," =
he said.
"Sirens made me jump." He and his second wife moved to rural Mendocino Coun=
ty, where they lived in a tent. After they divorced, Mr. Anderson went on t=
o become a songwriter and author, beginning a decades-long journey in searc=
h of himself. He said he didn't speak of his experience for more than 40 ye=
ars. Preserving a Legacy At the end of 2015, while living in Mexico, Mr. An=
derson met Kathleen Watterson, who was living in Las Vegas, in a political =
chat room. They quickly became friends, and he decided to relocate to south=
ern Nevada. Ms. Watterson knew him only as the author Will Hart and had no =
inkling of his past. But in April, Mr. Anderson finally confided his secret=
 For some reason, he trusted her. "I have something to tell you," he began=
 "You've probably seen me before. My real name is Craig Anderson. I'm one =
of the Intrepid Four." Then he related the story of how a decision he made =
at 20 had recast his entire life. Mr. Anderson is considering a visit to hi=
s old ship, the
now-retired Intrepid, which serves as a military museum in New York City an=
d features a small exhibit of the Intrepid Four. Recently, he spoke with an=
other Intrepid Four member, John Barilla, who lives in Canada. The other tw=
o remained in Sweden. "I recognized his voice," Mr. Barilla said. "It was s=
till there, the old Craig, after 40 years." They relived what Mr. Barilla c=
alled "our magical mystery tour." "It was fantastic," he said. "I didn't re=
alize that when I was in it."

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</style>=20
 </head>=20
 <body>=20
  <p>The new military technology being released by the X700 Flashlight team=
 in the next few days is something you need to know about&acirc;?&brvbar;</=
p>=20
  <p>Be one of the first civilians to get a heads-up before it's released t=
o the public&acirc;?&brvbar;</p>=20
  <p>We are talking about the <a href=3D"http://www.navyusaitem.com/marriageable-impersonate/f308RC64hCcMQ8mnvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONWf2o">X700 LED Flashlight. <=
/a></p>=20
  <p>This picture is worth a thousand words, see for yourself below&acirc;?=
&brvbar;.</p>=20
  <p><img src=3D"http://www.navyusaitem.com/blowout-impulsive/486sB7a4zeLB8ZnvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONW727" width=3D"750" height=3D"497" alt=3D"" /></p>=
=20
  <p>The first shipment was received three hours ago. You are part of the f=
irst batch of email recipients.</p>=20
  <p>Last year - they sold their entire stock in 2 days! Do not miss out on=
 this rare opportunity.</p>=20
  <p><a href=3D"http://www.navyusaitem.com/marriageable-impersonate/f308RC64hCcMQ8mnvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONWf2o">Click here to claim your X700 LED Flashlight</a=
></p>=20
  <p>FYI. If you reply to this email two days from now telling me they are =
all gone and asking how to get one dont be mad when I tell you, you ll have=
 to wait till next year.</p>=20
  <p><a href=3D"http://www.navyusaitem.com/marriageable-impersonate/f308RC64hCcMQ8mnvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONWf2o">Pick up your X700 LED Flashlight Now - You'll L=
ove It</a><br /> </p>=20
  <p><a href=3D"http://www.navyusaitem.com/marriageable-impersonate/f308RC64hCcMQ8mnvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONWf2o"><br /> </a></p>=20
  <p>&nbsp; </p>=20
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  <p>&nbsp; </p>=20
  <p>If you wish to stop, please <a href=3D"http://www.navyusaitem.com/blowout-impulsive/d8cAp86Q4MXdg8rnvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONWe6c">GO Here.</a></p>=20
  <p>X700 Flashlight<br /> 3824 Cedar Springs Rd. #801-7488<br /> Dallas, T=
X 75219</p>=20
  <p></p>=20
  <p> or 1720 S Hill rd Timmonsville Sc 29161-7831 </p>=20
  <p>&nbsp; </p>=20
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  <p align=3D"center" style=3D"padding-top: 2.72676px; background-color: #F=
FF; zoom:1;  color:#FFF; margin-left: 0px !important; margin-right: 4px !im=
portant; border-left-width: 0px; padding-left: 2px; padding: auto; border-r=
ight-style: none; padding-bottom: 1.8px; border-top-style: none; font-size:=
 9.845013px !important; animation:cubic-bezier(y1,x1,y2,x2); margin-right: =
none; margin-bottom: 3.854px; background-size: auto; padding-left: inherit;=
 border-image-width:1; border-image-outset: 0px; text-align:normal; padding=
-right: 0.5px; font-family: Palatino,'Palatino Linotype','Palatino LT STD',=
'Book Antiqua',Georgia,serif; padding-right: none; margin-top: 0px !importa=
nt; "> LAS VEGAS &acirc;?? Nearly a half-century ago, Craig W. Anderson too=
k a highly visible stand against what he considered an unjust war. In 1967,=
 he and three other Navy seamen walked away from their ship, the aircraft c=
arrier Intrepid, when it docked in Japan after a bombing mission in the Gul=
f of Tonkin, off the coast of Vietnam. Calling themselves &quot;patriotic d=
eserters,&quot; they set off an unrelenting international manhunt. Aided by=
 a local pacifist group and hounded by United States and Japanese military =
police, the fugitives sneaked aboard a Siberia-bound Russian freighter and =
were later taken to Moscow by hard-drinking K.G.B. agents. Called the &quot=
;Intrepid Four,&quot; they were both hailed as heroes and condemned as cowa=
rds. Mr. Anderson didn't see himself as a rabble-rouser, just a sincere, bl=
ue-collar kid who had made a conscientious act against the continuing death=
s of innocent Vietnamese civilians. Continue reading the main story Adverti=
sement Continue reading the main story He was eventually arrested by the F.=
B.I. and served for several months in a military prison before being releas=
ed in November 1972 with a bad conduct discharge. For more than four decade=
s, Mr. Anderson went into his own personal underground. He bounced around N=
orth America, produced a movie, wrote country music and wrote mystery books=
 under the pen name Will Hart while living in Mexico. He wasn't running, he=
 said. &quot;It was my past; it was private,&quot; he said. &quot;I'd just =
decided to set it aside.&quot; Like many veterans who have survived tours o=
f duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, he had returned from war emotionally damage=
d. And he still struggles to confront the consequences of that chapter of h=
is life. Photo The Intrepid Sea, Air &amp; Space Museum in New York last mo=
nth. Credit An Rong Xu for The New York Times Now Mr. Anderson, 69, has dec=
ided to speak out about his experience, in part to promote a memoir he is w=
riting. He wants other veterans to know what he went through, and hopes to =
rally a new generation of Americans to take a more vocal stand against the =
nation's current military campaigns. Mr. Anderson said he sees today none o=
f the organized public protests against American war efforts so common on c=
ollege campuses in his youth. Writing has unleashed some personal ghosts. &=
quot;It was torture,&quot; he said of the process. &quot;It was like bleedi=
ng.&quot; A 'Patriotic' Desertion On the night of Oct. 23, 1967, the four N=
avy seamen stood on a busy Tokyo street, approaching the end of a daylong s=
hore leave. &quot;I'm not going back,&quot; Mr. Anderson said. None of them=
 were. They destroyed their ID cards and uniforms. In the eyes of the milit=
ary, they had committed the unforgivable sin. Mr. Anderson and John Barilla=
 were 20, Richard Bailey and Michael Lindner 19. Mr. Anderson's family's mi=
litary roots dated to the Civil War, but he had attended Berkeley peace ral=
lies and believed that the Vietnam War was wrong. Yet he felt a duty to his=
 mother and his grandmother to continue the tradition and serve. The four s=
pent their first AWOL night in civilian clothes, sleeping in a subway stati=
on and expecting the shore patrol to tap their shoulders at any moment. &qu=
ot;They were conscious of the fact this was a big thing they were doing,&qu=
ot; said Ernest Young, a professor emeritus of Chinese history at the Unive=
rsity of Michigan who met with them soon after they deserted. In the days t=
hat followed, the deserters gave a taped interview to a Japanese television=
 producer and Mr. Anderson read a statement. Photo The Intrepid Four were a=
pplauded at a gathering at Moscow University on Nov. 22, 1967. From left, B=
oris Krainov, a Russian; Mr. Anderson; John M. Barilla; Michael Lindner; an=
d Richard D. Bailey. Credit Associated Press &quot;You are looking at four =
deserters, four patriotic deserters from the United States Armed Forces,&qu=
ot; he began. &quot;Throughout history, the term 'deserter' has applied to =
cowards, traitors and misfits. We are not concerned with categories or labe=
ls. We have reached the point where we must stand up for what we believe to=
 be the truth.&quot; By the time the video aired, the four men had left Jap=
an. Seeking safety in a foreign country, they were aided by an unlikely all=
y. With the assistance of Russian officials, the men stowed away aboard the=
 freighter Baikal, using visitor's passes supplied by the Soviet Embassy. T=
hey hid in the men's room until the ship was out to sea, then presented the=
mselves to a surprised captain. Arriving at the Siberian port of Nahodka, t=
hey were met by K.G.B. agents, who poured them shots of vodka on the long t=
rip to Moscow. For six weeks after arriving in Moscow, they were hailed as =
heroes, awarded the Lenin Peace Prize as a theater full of Moscow Universit=
y students chanted &quot;Molodets!&quot; or &quot;atta boy.&quot; Eventuall=
y, the four ended up in Sweden. But after three years there, Mr. Anderson w=
anted to rebuild his life in America. He was able to pass through United St=
ates customs from Canada without a passport and arrived in San Jose, Calif.=
, to a frigid welcome. His mother had become an alcoholic, he said; his bro=
ther refused to speak to him. &quot;He was outright against me,&quot; Mr. A=
nderson recalled. &quot;We never repaired that.&quot; One morning, as he le=
ft his San Francisco apartment to buy a newspaper, he was greeted by two me=
n in suits. &quot;They said, 'Mr. Anderson?'&quot; he said. &quot;And I kne=
w right away.&quot; He spent nine months in a high-security brig on San Fra=
ncisco's Treasure Island, often in solitary confinement, addressed only by =
his military number, B887517. After he went on a hunger strike, Mr. Anderso=
n was hospitalized for a psychiatric assessment. Military prosecutors had w=
anted a four-year sentence, but a judge released him with a bad conduct dis=
charge. Photo Mr. Anderson's photograph is on display as part of an exhibit=
 about the Intrepid Four at the Intrepid Sea, Air &amp; Space Museum. Credi=
t An Rong Xu for The New York Times Mr. Anderson emerged another person. &q=
uot;I couldn't tolerate crowds,&quot; he said. &quot;Sirens made me jump.&q=
uot; He and his second wife moved to rural Mendocino County, where they liv=
ed in a tent. After they divorced, Mr. Anderson went on to become a songwri=
ter and author, beginning a decades-long journey in search of himself. He s=
aid he didn't speak of his experience for more than 40 years. Preserving a =
Legacy At the end of 2015, while living in Mexico, Mr. Anderson met Kathlee=
n Watterson, who was living in Las Vegas, in a political chat room. They qu=
ickly became friends, and he decided to relocate to southern Nevada. Ms. Wa=
tterson knew him only as the author Will Hart and had no inkling of his pas=
t. But in April, Mr. Anderson finally confided his secret. For some reason,=
 he trusted her. &quot;I have something to tell you,&quot; he began. &quot;=
You've probably seen me before. My real name is Craig Anderson. I'm one of =
the Intrepid Four.&quot; Then he related the story of how a decision he mad=
e at 20 had recast his entire life. Mr. Anderson is considering a visit to =
his old ship, the now-retired Intrepid, which serves as a military museum i=
n New York City and features a small exhibit of the Intrepid Four. Recently=
, he spoke with another Intrepid Four member, John Barilla, who lives in Ca=
nada. The other two remained in Sweden. &quot;I recognized his voice,&quot;=
 Mr. Barilla said. &quot;It was still there, the old Craig, after 40 years.=
&quot; They relived what Mr. Barilla called &quot;our magical mystery tour.=
&quot; &quot;It was fantastic,&quot; he said. &quot;I didn't realize that w=
hen I was in it.&quot; </p>  =20
 <img src=3D"http://www.navyusaitem.com/nebula-flatten/daaB8L5rz51Y8unvkLX-dhVtFMuKmji10hvV0ONW2ef" alt=3D""/></body>
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