lawunetiey
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lawunetiey
glopedoraaamodyes
elopenod
kepers goin sleepers now.
chickaguago
gleosoekefeell
qoelidlese.ve
89tad89tad98dat98dat
quadraplatypodvoid
bru-32
serious suckage
AE-F/A-18AC-740-300
LWS-000
she said no! holy cow biotches!
CHAFF-TOOL
AIM-9 LAUNCHER
strange commercial. 120km/hr bam.
MULTIPLE EJECTION RACK-MER
eat chimi changa like peach to the face.
COLLATERAL DUTY INSPECTOR-CDI
piegonsel in the darkentaldo!
VERTICAL EJECTION RACK-VER
it's kitty day today. i get a kitten.
M61A1- 20-mm automatic gun system
BOMBS, FUZES, AND ASSOCIATED COMPONENTS
Bombs must be manufactured to withstand reasonable heat and be insensitive to the shock of ordinary handling. They must also be capable of being dropped from an aircraft in a safe condition when in-flight emergencies occur. Bomb detonation is controlled by the action of a fuze. A fuze is a device that causes the detonation of an explosive charge at the proper time after certain conditions are met. A bomb fuze is a mechanical or an electrical device. It has the sensitive explosive elements (the primer and detonator) and the necessary mechanical/electrical action to detonate the main burster charge. A mechanical action or an electrical impulse, which causes the detonator to explode, fires the primer. The primer-detonator explosion is relayed to the main charge by a booster charge. This completes the explosive train.
polute your lunghs!>
children don't smoke cigars yo!
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so what if my hair is on fire. i like it like that.
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bodlanelelveo
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Afilias provides complete back-office services for all registry management needs -- from registration to resolution.
Periodontal disease is a chronic inflammatory process that occurs in about 14% of the adult population in the United States. Gram-negative bacteria (ex. Porphyromonas gingivalis, Prevotella intermedia, and Prevotella nigrescens) originating from dental plague cause inflammation of the gums eventually leading to periodontal pockets between the gums and the tooth roots.
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Meningitis is an infection of the fluid of a person's spinal cord and the fluid that surrounds the brain. People sometimes refer to it as spinal meningitis. Meningitis is usually caused by a viral or bacterial infection. Knowing whether meningitis is caused by a virus or a bacterium is important because the severity of illness and the treatment differ.
Viral meningitis is generally less severe and resolves without specific treatment, while bacterial meningitis can be quite severe and might result in brain damage, hearing loss, or learning disability.
For bacterial meningitis, it is also important to know which type of bacteria is causing the meningitis because antibiotics can prevent some types from spreading and infecting other people. Before the 1990s, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) was the leading cause of bacterial meningitis, but new vaccines being given to all children as part of their routine immunizations have reduced the occurrence of invasive disease due to H. influenzae. Today, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis are the leading causes of bacterial meningitis.
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Bacterial meningitis can be treated with a number of effective antibiotics. It is important, however, that treatment be started early in the course of the disease. Appropriate antibiotic treatment of most common types of bacterial meningitis should reduce the risk of dying from meningitis to below 15%, although the risk is higher among the elderly.
When I was a kid my mother would frequently tell me that spitting was not appropriate behavior and it would not be allowed in her presence. The only exceptions to this rule was when I played baseball or when I went to the dentist.
Baseball players used to spit a lot and that was probably because of the large amounts of chewing tobacco they all used to stuff in their mouths. Fewer baseball players use chewing tobacco today and that is good. Chewing tobacco is hard on the teeth and gums and the spit it produced was that terrible looking brown stuff. Since my mother did not allow me to chew tobacco a nice wade of gum would induce enough saliva for the frequent donation to the grass in the ballpark. I don't know maybe it was a way of irrigating the ballpark on dry years.
Sorry I got distracted. We were also asked to spit a lot at the dentist. This was before those suction tubes that they frequently use now. Beside the dentist chair was a small round white porcelain sink (around 6-8 inches in diameter) with water constantly flowing out of a metal tube just inside the edge of the sink to wash down the saliva the dentist would frequently ask us to produce.
Going to the dentist, for me, was not always a pleasant experience. My folks insisted we go to the dentist two times a year for a "check up". The cleaning of the teeth was fine. A little scraping here a little poking there and before you knew it your teeth felt cleaner than ever and your mouth had that nice mint-like taste and gritty feeling. The part I didn't like was the news I got at the end of the "check up". I knew what they were checking for and frequently they found them: CAVITIES! My brother did not have many cavities and he never thought it very scary to go to the dentist. But for me always lingering in the back of my mind was the fear of the bad news the dentist's final words would bring at the end of my check up.
The most common cause of tooth loss in children is cavity formation. The most common cause of a tooth cavity is a bacterium called Streptococcus mutans. This bacterium takes the sugar it finds when someone eats a sweet treat and turns that sugar into acid. When the bacteria turn the sugar into acid they are making energy for themselves. Unfortunately, the acid eats away at the tooth surface. If allowed to progress long enough the damage can get into the nerve of