Posted by xsydijxfex21 (120.32.70.180) on 21 May 2012 21:04:55 GMT:
In Reply to: Re: Re: Unknown coach veritable COACH, instruct gladstone bag, notecase, free shipping nationwide posted by Proextender penis on 15 May 2012 23:35:08 GMT:
Monster Beats Solo
Brooklyn fruit peddler Andy Angioletti thought he was doing a good deed when he reunited a lost Chihuahua with its owner. The only problem is the pooch didn't belong to the woman who claimed him - and now the real owner is heartbroken over the mixup. "I can't sleep. I can't eat," said Dennis Burge, 45, an accountant from Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, who is offering a $1,000 reward for 10-month-old Zach. "It's constantly on my mind. I don't go more than two or three minutes without thinking about him." This shaggy-dog story took a wrong turn last week, on the morning of June 9, as Burge walked Zach and his other dog through Prospect Park. The two animals bolted up a hill, and by the time Burge caught up to them, Zach had disappeared. The precocious pup made his way into Park Slope and wound up at Angioletti's popular fruit stand at Seventh Ave. and President St. "The dog had no collar, no leash," he said. "I made a couple of signs that said 'Puppy found' and I fed him." All day long, passersby stopped at the stand to coo over the dog. But there was no sign of an owner until 5:30 p.m., as Angioletti, 60, was getting ready to pack up. "This woman comes by and she says, 'I heard you found a dog.' She says, 'It's my dog.' She picked him up and the dog started to lick her." Off they went, and Angioletti thought that was the end of it. Flyers produce tips Burge, meanwhile, was a wreck over the missing 6-pound ball of fur he and his wife fell in love with at a Long Island pet store about six months ago. He plastered the neighborhood with flyers about Zach. Last Wednesday, he got a few calls from people who had seen the dog at the fruit stand. He rushed to Angioletti's spot, but the fruit man had left early because of rain. The next day, Burge found him - and learned about the mystery woman who took the dog. "I'm heartbroken," he said. "He's a wonderful little guy." Angioletti said he feels terrible, too. "I thought she was the owner. The dog cuddled right up next to her," he said. "I've been sick for two days over this thing."
Air Jordan 22
WASHINGTONThe Pentagon yesterday blocked the retirement of at least 6,000 Air Force pilots, navigators and ground crews who had put in their papers to guarantee that planes will keep flying in the escalating campaign against Yugoslavia. "We do not take this action lightly," said Acting Air Force Secretary Whitt Peters, who signed the "stop-loss" orders, the first bans on retirements since the 1991 Persian Gulf War. Military sources said the Pentagon also was preparing for another round of reserve callups in line with NATO's plan to increase ground troop strength near Kosovo to 50,000 to serve as an eventual peacekeeping force under a negotiated settlement. The next callup would include Army Reserve units for the first time and likely tap civil affairs specialists from the New York metropolitan region, the sources said. The Pentagon announcements came as NATO warplanes carried out 284 bombing runs against Kosovo and Serbia in the heaviest raids yet in the two-month-old campaign. The raids zeroed in for the second time in two days on Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic's suburban Belgrade villa. They also hit five tanks and 15 artillery positions, among other targets, NATO spokesmen said. In a Naval Academy commencement address, Defense Secretary William Cohen said limiting NATO's military action to an air campaign at the onset "was the right decision then, and it is the right course of action now." But retiring Army Chief of Staff Dennis Reimer joined a growing chorus of active-duty and retired officers voicing doubts. In the initial planning, "I had concerns about whether air power would do it by itself," Reimer told Pentagon reporters. He suggested that other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff also harbored doubts but that some members "felt that air might do it" alone. The retirement ban applied to 120,000 pilots, navigators, air traffic controllers and maintenance crews among the 360,000 active-duty Air Force personnel, but it would immediately affect at least 6,000 who had planned to quit the service this year, Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said. Air Force reservists with the same occupational specialty also will be barred from retiring, Bacon said. Peters' order takes effect June 15 to allow personnel who plan to retire to ask for waivers, Bacon said.
www.buyjordanscheap.net
More reports of tainted bottled water surfaced yesterday as investigators tried to figure out if someone ising to poison unsuspecting New Yorkers. A 42-year-old Long Island woman apparently became the latest victim last night when she suffered nausea and "a burning sensation" in her mouth and stomach after downing a bottle of Poland Spring water, Nassau County Police said. The unidentified Hicksville resident bought the water around 8 p.m. during a workout at an area health club. Police said she was examined at a local hospital and sent home after doctors found nothing seriously wrong. Cops said a preliminary examination of the water turned up no evidence of tampering, but more tests are scheduled. Earlier yesterday, it was reported that a Washington Heights man felt a burning sensation in his mouth Thursday night after he, too, drank from a bottle of Poland Spring. Authorities are also taking a fresh look at a July 2 case in which a man in New Rochelle, Westchester, got sick after drinking Poland Spring water he bought at a pizza joint. Those incidents bring to eight the number of contamination cases under investigation. "Our investigation is to determine if crimes have been committed, and whether any of the incidents are linked," said Special Agent Jim Margolin, an FBI spokesman. In another new case that occurred Thursday, police said Eduardo Pardo, 30, bought a bottle of Poland Spring water at Ray's Groceries on Audubon Ave. in Washington Heights and took it to a local gym. After working out, Pardo said, he drank from the bottle and noticed an odd taste. He drank from the same bottle later, and the water burned his throat and made him dizzy, he said. "I was scared," said Pardo, 30, a mailroom clerk. "I was nervous. I panicked because I didn't know what it was that I drank." Pardo was treated at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and released. The bottle's contents are being tested. Investigators said they are most intrigued by two of the Manhattan cases: an Aug. 27 incident in which a 50-year-old man fell ill after drinking Aquafina purchased at a Hell's Kitchen deli, and a Sept. 6 case in which a 15-month-old boy got sick after drinking Poland Spring water bought in Washington Heights. The city said in each of those cases the water was tainted with ammonia. Also, the bottles apparently were opened shortly after being purchased. Graphic: LOOKING FOR A LINK
http://www.monsterbeatssingapore.com
http://www.load.or.kz/user/latbqmigak37/
http://111angar.ru/user/xaovodgpoq87/
http://forum.therepadmin.com/index.php?action=profile;u=118350
http://forum.confindustriamodena.it/member.php?54023-tletapquhi20