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eugx Guatemalans STD lawsuit invalid, U.S. argues

Yolg The Call Of The (Not So) Open Road
The Odd Truth is a collection of strange but factual news stories from around the world compiled by CBSNews s Brian Bernbaum.Bush Named Top Screen VillainLONDON - With U.S. voters soon to pass their verdict on President George W. Bush, readers of a British magazine have rated him the year s top screen villain.Bush won the dubious accolade, announced Wednesday, for his appearance in Michael Moore s Fahrenheit 9/11, a documentary that cast Bush in a deeply unflattering light.The president beat out a shortlist of fictional film bad guys, including the nefarious Doctor Octopus, played by Alfred Molina, in Spider-Man 2 ; The Texas Chainsaw Massacre s cannibalistic Leatherface; Andy Serk [url=https://www.cup-stanley.us]stanley flask[/url] i [url=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.ca]stanley canada[/url] s creepy Gollum fr [url=https://www.stanleymugs.us]stanley mugs[/url] om Lord of the Rings trilogy, and Elle Driver, the eyepatch-wearing assassin played by Daryl Hannah in Kill Bill. Almost 10,000 people voted in the poll, conducted by Total Film Magazine. It is possible that people have been a little bit tongue in cheek here, but they are also saying that Bush was very scary in Fahrenheit 9/11, said the magazine s editor, Matt Mueller.Cold Chillin SPOKANE, Wash. - It may seem creepy, but it s not necessarily a crime to keep a corpse in the freezer, police say. A 59-year-old man walked into the Public Safety Building on Tuesday to ask what he should do with the dead woman s body he had stashed in a chest-style freezer, Capt. Bruce Roberts said. Detectives who responded to the Chateaux Apartments found the body of a 57 Fbro It Turns Out Cyclists Only Really Need Half a Bike To Get To Work
Pacemakers are designed to compensate for a condition known as bradycardia, where the heart beats too slowly to provide sufficient amounts of oxygen to the body. And to allow patients with pacemakers installed to continue healthy pursuits like exercise, a company called Boston Scientific is introducing a new line with a feature called RightRate technology that monitors respiration and adjusts the pacing accordingly. It widely assumed that the need for a pacemaker is tied to old age, and while the risk of developing bradycardia does increase as you ge [url=https://www.stanley-cups.uk]stanley quencher[/url] t older, it doesn ;t necessarily only turn up in senior citizens. And until now, younger patients with the condition would find thems [url=https://www.stanley-cup.fr]stanley cup[/url] elves tiring when their level of physical activity increased, because the steady pulse of their pacemakers wouldn ;t pump enough blood to keep up with their added oxygen use. So the new technology, included in Boston Scientific Inliven, Vitalio, and Formio pacemakers, will allow younger patients to continue their active lifestyles, without having to constantly stop and wait for their bodies to catch with their increased activity. [Boston Scientific [url=https://www.stanley-cup.com.de]stanley cups[/url] via medGagdet] GadgetsHealth