-Caveat Lector- A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/"
/A -Cui Bono?-
- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-Original Message-
Is NewAge culture like a toildt bowl - al the really big turds
float to the top? Why?
Because evolution works that way.
Blame buoyancy, not
-Caveat Lector-
Nobody would want to consume human meats with AIDS in 'em -- RE: "Reptoids
Like Human AIDS meats" -- etc. Use your head. Judith
DECLARATION DISCLAIMER
==
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed.
-Caveat Lector-
- Original Message -
From: Judith A. Brundin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Nobody would want to consume human meats with AIDS in 'em -- RE:
"Reptoids Like Human AIDS meats" -- etc. Use your head. Judith
Reptoids, not even being mammals, let alone primates, would be no
more
-Caveat Lector-
- Original Message -
From: Hilary A. Thomas [EMAIL PROTECTED]
# 'Scientists started Aids epidemic'. (BBC) A polio vaccine using
tissue from primates could have been behind the leap made by the
human immunodeficiency virus [HIV] from apes and moneys to humans,
-Caveat Lector-
Bill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-Caveat Lector-
Tleilaxu.
Gesundheit.
=
Robert F. Tatman
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Remove "nospam" from the address to reply.
NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is
-Caveat Lector-
Tleilaxu.
Ric Carter wrote:
-Caveat Lector-
- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
# How We Became Human: The evolution of Homo sapiens wasn't a
steady march from primitivism to perfection. Instead, as new-
found fossils reveal, it was a turbulent
-Caveat Lector-
- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
# How We Became Human: The evolution of Homo sapiens wasn't a
steady march from primitivism to perfection. Instead, as new-
found fossils reveal, it was a turbulent tale, full of false
starts and repeated failures,
-Caveat Lector-
-Original Message-
From: Doug Keachie [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Ric Carter wrote:
*** Nations review population strategy. AMSTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) -
With the world's population projected to hit 6 billion this year, a
weeklong U.N. population forum has taken on a new sense