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Tomberg ce-ai facut cu vioara lui Mutti ?

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† Prof. Dr. Ing. IPS Raspopitul Esq.

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Nov 17, 2006, 9:05:40 AM11/17/06
to
From: domn...@aol.com (DOMNITZA)
Date: 19 Feb 2001 21:24:03 GMT


From: daci...@aol.com (DACIA LAN)
Subject: The Case of the Stolen Stradivarius (2)
Message-ID: <20010218222816...@ng-mk1.aol.com>

washingtonpost.com: Sunday Style: The Case of the Stolen Stradivarius
URL: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/features/strad050...
Summary: The Case of the Stolen Stradivarius By Amy Dickinson Special
to The
Washington Post Sunday, May 9, 1999; Page E1 The FBI is saying the case
is
still open, but it's not kidding anybody.

>Esti un focar de calomnie indreptat asupra romanilor americani
>care au avut succes in viata. Amaritule.

ba prostalaule, uite cum te faci de rahat singur: ce are stradivaru lu
LUCI cu
boul de PDSR-ist Ardei? faptul ca in spatele dobitocului de 'ardei' se
ascunde
Luci_muci_a_lu_hoaska!!!!


nu 'face' tu pe nimeni amarat ca mai amarastean decit tine nu'i nimeni:
nu tu
famelie, nu tu remuneratie, nada budget, maria-lezbo,
hoaska_spurcaciune
mirositoare a pisat, prietenii(si aia putini) i'ai pierdut, de kkt
te'ai facut
si'n romania si pe hudson .....ti'a ramas SCR sa'ti dai in stamba!!!!!

marele filozofu suli, hunteru de muste, popa smintana a lu creanga, mos
tagirtza, ocultu budei din bronx, genet in decadere, roxane cu lampa
rosie in
creier, gigolo de hoaste, decazut si obsedat sexual ...!!!!!!!!!

mopul closetelor publice tre sa fie mai curat decit limba ta
spurcata!!!!!

Poliot

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Nov 17, 2006, 9:34:16 AM11/17/06
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† Prof. Dr. Ing. IPS Raspopitul Esq. wrote:
> From: domn...@aol.com (DOMNITZA)
> Date: 19 Feb 2001 21:24:03 GMT
>
>
> From: daci...@aol.com (DACIA LAN)
> Subject: The Case of the Stolen Stradivarius (2)
> Message-ID: <20010218222816...@ng-mk1.aol.com>

dacialan erai tot tu?

dijma

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Nov 17, 2006, 9:57:21 AM11/17/06
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hmm, d. avea tot un fel de stronghead aka prozacu's...... ba$ca ca mai
si spurcau pe gogul pe facies -;)

Poliot

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Nov 17, 2006, 10:32:40 AM11/17/06
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in plus marele bolnav al scr-ului e singurul care jura ca il stie clar
pe burlacu, a vorbit cu el si ala i-a confirmat "sigur parintzele eu
sint dacia din lan". inca o confirmare ca personajele lui intra la
categoria plonk medical, carantina. iti trebuie o energie de un anume
tip ca sa postezi zilnic tot felul de mascari.

dijma

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Nov 17, 2006, 10:49:32 AM11/17/06
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noi nu credem ca e *bolnav* -- poate ce e doar bine intentionat si vrea
sa atraga trafic pe grupul care il considera cumva his brain child ?!?

Poliot

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Nov 17, 2006, 10:53:17 AM11/17/06
to

da' de unde! brain child e o molusca moarta intr-o gura de canal, pe
numele lui: gogu.

dijma

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Nov 17, 2006, 10:55:49 AM11/17/06
to

aici imi aduci aminte de asertiunea lui gogu mai acum citiva ani ca el
cunoastea cu inalta precizie cam cite personaje reale existau pe scr
--- de unde se poate deduce ca *bolnavul* nostru e in foarte *intime*
relatii gu gogul

† Prof. Dr. Ing. IPS Raspopitul Esq.

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Nov 17, 2006, 10:56:08 AM11/17/06
to
Da' ia spune nepurcele, Gogu tot eu ?? Ca alfel nu ie diagnostiku beton
!

Poliot

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Nov 17, 2006, 11:03:04 AM11/17/06
to

in mod clar comunica "pe privata" si gogul stie de puzderia de anonimi.

Poliot

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Nov 17, 2006, 11:05:03 AM11/17/06
to
† Prof. Dr. Ing. IPS Raspopitul Esq. wrote:
> Da' ia spune nepurcele, Gogu tot eu ?? Ca alfel nu ie diagnostiku beton
> !
>

dintr-un motiv clar, nu. habar n-ai greceste si imbecilul salonican pare
sa stie. in plus gogul ocupa cealalta parte a patologiei usenetului
fiind activ acolo unde tu nu poci ca sa ajungi. poate ca de aia sinteti
aliati intr-un 69 fara sfirsit.

dijma

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Nov 17, 2006, 11:08:57 AM11/17/06
to

atunci n-ar fi exclus ca tot el l-a *montat* pe gogu impotriva lui
g......

Poliot

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Nov 17, 2006, 11:10:24 AM11/17/06
to

gogul e manipulabil si a comunicat pe privata inafara inocentului (oare?
) badzil cu gornistul stingaci si cu prostpopitul. de nenumarate ori
gogul a aparut pe scr intr-un anume mindset urmare a unor info reale sau
manipulative pe care le-a primit (vezi cazul lui jupinu, cine i-a turnat
info despre el?)

dijma

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Nov 17, 2006, 11:26:51 AM11/17/06
to

hmm, s-ar putea ca nici herr ghe sa nu fie atit de inocent -- adica la
o analiza mai atenta, intruneste toate conditiile de tartore -- pozitiv
ce-i drept, pina la proba contrarie -- da asta nu exclude posibilitatea
ca sa fie si el manipulat subtil --- oricum, trinitatea gogu, her ghe
si raspopa e un subiect interesant de analiza --- o interdependenta
foarte subtila -- n-ar fi surprinzator daca si animozitatile recente
dintre dumnealor s-ar rezuma ca fiind tot smokescreen....

The Reviewer

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Nov 17, 2006, 11:31:42 AM11/17/06
to

Poliot wrote:
> † Prof. Dr. Ing. IPS Raspopitul Esq. wrote:
> > Da' ia spune nepurcele, Gogu tot eu ?? Ca alfel nu ie diagnostiku beton
> > !
> >
>
> dintr-un motiv clar, nu. habar n-ai greceste

Nu e deloc clar daca exista ceva la care *are* habar - in schimb de
nommes de guerre si de nick-uri e plin: ar vrea pesemne ca el sa
centreze si tot el sa dea cu capul ;-)

† Prof. Dr. Ing. IPS Raspopitul Esq.

unread,
Nov 17, 2006, 11:39:17 AM11/17/06
to
The Reviewer wrote:

> Nu e deloc clar daca exista ceva la care *are* habar - in schimb de
> nommes de guerre si de nick-uri e plin: ar vrea pesemne ca el sa
> centreze si tot el sa dea cu capul ;-)

Pai ce, numai Marian ? Haoleu, am uitat, tot eu sunt Marian aaaaaaaa ?!

Poliot

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Nov 17, 2006, 11:43:28 AM11/17/06
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pai in mod evident mr gold smith s-a folosit de gogul ca de un dummy
audience ca sa lanseze pledoarii pentru un anume punct de vedere. nimic
rau in asta, instructiv si entertaining.
in mod clar ca sa-i tina atentia focused din cind in cind i-a dat
gogului un os de ros.
gogul a fost curtat indelung, chestia e ca trebuie sa inghiti
ghiolbaniile lui permanent, gogul are maniere de oier, si probabil i
s-a urit.

Message has been deleted

† Prof. Dr. Ing. IPS Raspopitul Esq.

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Nov 17, 2006, 4:39:33 PM11/17/06
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On Nov 17, 10:32 am, Poliot <Ska...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> > hmm, d. avea tot un fel de stronghead aka prozacu's...... ba$ca ca mai
> > si spurcau pe gogul pe facies -;)in plus marele bolnav al scr-ului e singurul care jura ca il stie clar

> pe burlacu, a vorbit cu el si ala i-a confirmat "sigur parintzele eu
> sint dacia din lan". inca o confirmare ca personajele lui intra la
> categoria plonk medical, carantina. iti trebuie o energie de un anume
> tip ca sa postezi zilnic tot felul de mascari.

The human centrifuge

* 04 November 2006
* NewScientist.com news service
* Stephanie Pain
"His countenance attached to saturnine blackness, the eyes, suffused
with bile, were immovably fixed on the ground, the limbs seemed
deprived of their locomotive powers, the action of the lungs, and the
circulation retarded, the tongue parched and silent, and the whole man
resembled an automaton." In Dr Cox's opinion, his patient was in the
grip of a "melancholy stupor". As the director of one of the largest
private asylums in Georgian England, Joseph Mason Cox was mad-doctor to
the better off and had just the thing to rouse this poor soul from the
depths of his depression. Cox, one of the first qualified doctors in
England to specialise in mental disorders, had invented a new sort of
treatment: a human centrifuge. A spin in Cox's "circulating swing" was
said to shock the madness from a man.

Good wine, a relaxing massage and soothing music: for Asclepiades, a
Greek doctor practising in 1st century Rome, these were the best
remedies for insanity. Kind and gentle treatment was far better than
chains and beatings. And the best therapy of all was sleep - preferably
natural, wholesome slumber rather than that induced by poppy juice or
other mind-altering preparations. To encourage a better sort of sleep,
Asclepiades invented one of the most enlightened pieces of medical
technology: a swinging bed.

If gentle swinging was effective, then, how much more might be achieved
by rapid rotation? At the start of the 19th century, a radical
variation on the swinging bed began to appear in asylums across Europe.
However, patients treated in Joseph Cox's circulating chair found the
experience anything but relaxing. Tied down and spun round at speed,
they turned pale, threw up and passed out. It was a far cry from
Asclepiades's soothing swing, but it got results. Even the most
disturbed patients became calm and easy to control. Cox believed any
fear or discomfort was all to the good, helping to distract a patient's
mind from mad thoughts. Best of all, it encouraged deep and therapeutic
sleep.

Down the centuries ideas about how to deal with the insane veered from
one extreme to another: some advocated kindness, others believed that
physical restraint and intimidation were more effective. Most asylums
had been little more than places to lock up the mad, but by the late
18th century attitudes were changing. Cox was one of a new breed of
mad-doctor. He was not a jailer or a manager of maniacs, but a medical
professional who had studied mental disorders and was prepared to
devote his life to investigating better ways to treat them.

The concept of swinging as therapy had gone in and out of fashion ever
since Asclepiades. Towards the end of the 18th century, James
Carmichael Smith, a Commissioner for Madhouses and physician to
Britain's most illustrious madman - King George III - revived the
notion. He suggested swinging could be used to subdue "the nervous
influence" and "the principle of irritability" in many sorts of
madness.

The idea of the human centrifuge sprang from the fertile mind of
Erasmus Darwin, physician, poet and inventor. Darwin was interested in
the nature of disease and how to cure bodies rather than minds. He was
a great believer in the healing power of sleep. But how best to induce
it? Darwin's friend James Brindley provided inspiration. Although
famous as a canal engineer, Brindley started out as a millwright: he'd
heard that if a man lay on a millstone as it turned, he soon fell
asleep. "The centrifugal motion of the head and feet must accumulate
the blood in both those extremities of the body, and thus compress the
brain," Darwin reasoned.

The same effect, he suggested, could be achieved more comfortably in a
bed suspended "so as to whirl the patient round with his head most
distant from the centre of rotation". Darwin enlisted another friend,
steam pioneer James Watt, to draw up designs for a "rotative couch", a
bed attached to an arm that revolved around a vertical shaft fixed to
the floor and ceiling. Darwin never built his revolving bed. It was
more suited to a hospital than the parlour of a man in private
practice, he said. When Cox took over his family's asylum in 1788, he
was ideally placed to test it.

Cox was soon singing the praises of rapid rotation. By the time he
published his Practical Observations on Insanity in 1804 he had
considerable experience of it. Whirling his patients round at speed
worked wonders, he wrote. Like Darwin, Cox believed in the restorative
powers of sleep. He also believed that if you provoked some sort of
physical crisis in the body, it would shock the mind back to normality,
at least temporarily. Spinning certainly had a drastic effect on the
body. At first the motion made patients feel nauseous; up the speed and
they vomited then lost control of bladder and bowels. Some bled from
the nose and ears; some had convulsions. Many passed out.
“Spun at high speed, they turned pale, threw up and passed out”

It was a sizeable shock to the system and invariably had a calming
effect. According to Cox, even the most demented, violent patients
would be left quiet and easy to control without resort to drugs. "The
slumbers thus procured differ as much from those induced by opiates as
the rest of the hardy sons of labour from that of the pampered,
intemperate debauchee."

The simplest version of Cox's device consisted of a Windsor chair
suspended from a hook in the ceiling and rotated with the help of ropes
around the chair legs. The patient, Cox advised, should be secured in a
straitjacket and "prevented from falling out of the chair by a broad
leather strap, passed round the waist and buckled to the spars, while
another strap to each leg may fasten it to the front ones of the
chair." A more sophisticated version was a bed or chair attached to an
arm that revolved around a vertical shaft, much like Darwin's concept.
"The necessary motion may be given by the hand of an attendant pushing
or pulling the extremity of the projecting arm, with greater or lesser
force, each time it circulates, but by a little simple additional
machinery any degree of velocity might be given, and the motion
communicated with the utmost facility."

By 1813 Cox was promoting spinning as a safe and effective treatment
for most kinds of madness. "No remedy is capable of effecting so much
with so little hazard. In almost every case it will produce perfect
quiescence, allay all irritation, silence the most vociferous and
loquacious." It was, he confessed, harder to make a madman giddy than a
sane one, "but there are very few of them who can resist the action of
a continued whirling with increased velocity, especially if suddenly
stopped. The shock this gives to the system and the alarm it excites is
not easily conceived by those who have never witnessed it."

Cox's chair became hugely popular in asylums in both the UK and
elsewhere. In Ireland, William Hallaran, who ran the Cork Lunatic
Asylum, was a great enthusiast, so much so he built a version that
could take four patients at a time and spun at 100 revolutions a
minute. The effect was much as Cox described: patients felt sick, threw
up and later fell into a deep sleep, from which, Hallaran maintained,
they awoke with their mad ideas "totally altered". The device, he
wrote, rendered his asylum "remarkable for its
tranquillity...regularity and order".

After a few decades Cox's chairs began to fall out of favour. Some
doctors suspected they did little more than exhaust patients into
submission. The treatment was dangerous - some patients died. By the
end of the century the chairs had been consigned to museums. In the
meantime the human centrifuge emerged in a new guise. When Austrian
physiologist Robert Bárány carried out his ground-breaking research
into the role of the inner ear in our sense of balance, he used a piece
of equipment that differed from Cox's spinning chair in just one
respect: it was called the Bárány chair. In 1914, his research won
him a Nobel prize.

gogu

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Nov 17, 2006, 5:02:42 PM11/17/06
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Ο "? Prof. Dr. Ing. IPS Raspopitul Esq." <raspo...@yahoo.com> έγραψε στο
μήνυμα news:1163778968.0...@b28g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...

>Da' ia spune nepurcele, Gogu tot eu ?? Ca alfel nu ie diagnostiku beton


Apai;-)

MS
Mintea de puliot=minte pula;-)

--

E' mai possibile, oh porco di un cane, che le avventure
in codesto reame debban risolversi tutte con grandi
puttane! F.d.A

Coins, travels and more: http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/golanule/my_photos
http://gogu.enosi.org/index.html
!

Poliot wrote:
> dijma wrote:
> > Poliot wrote:
> >> dijma wrote:
> >>> Poliot wrote:

Poliot

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Nov 17, 2006, 5:06:22 PM11/17/06
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gogu wrote:
> Ο "? Prof. Dr. Ing. IPS Raspopitul Esq." <raspo...@yahoo.com> έγραψε στο
> μήνυμα news:1163778968.0...@b28g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
>> Da' ia spune nepurcele, Gogu tot eu ?? Ca alfel nu ie diagnostiku beton
>
>
> Apai;-)
>
> MS
> Mintea de puliot=minte pula;-)
>

io'te, ba, a inviat molusca moarta din canal!

Poliot

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Nov 17, 2006, 5:07:51 PM11/17/06
to
Get Sesavatars wrote:
>
> Dar aveti in arhiva mare bogatie de date, prin care va
> puteti cizela la filigran "profilurile"

pai, de ce? profilul meu ce cusur are?

gogu

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Nov 17, 2006, 5:08:53 PM11/17/06
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Bai ce vremuri!
Atunci macar a fost o caterinca adevarata, fara rautate...
Acum, au plecat baietii de baieti si au ramas doar idiotii si
lowlifes(majoritatea)...
Nah, e cum am zis tot timpul, generatia noua e shallow, fara caracter si
fara etica, salbatica si prost crescuta.

--

E' mai possibile, oh porco di un cane, che le avventure
in codesto reame debban risolversi tutte con grandi
puttane! F.d.A

Ο "? Prof. Dr. Ing. IPS Raspopitul Esq." <raspo...@yahoo.com> έγραψε στο

μήνυμα news:1163772340.1...@k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

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