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POPSGang 'killed victims to extract their fat' more (at source): "The fat was extracted from the thorax and thighs," said Eusebio Felix Murga, chief of police of Dirincri district. Police also showed a photo of the rotting head of a 27-year-old male victim discovered last month in a coca-growing valley. Medical experts said human fat had cosmetic applications to keep skin supple but were sceptical about an international black market. "It doesn't make any sense at all because in most countries we can get fat so readily and in such amounts from people who are willing and ready to donate," Adam Katz, a professor of plastic surgery at the University of Virginia medical school, told the Associated Press.
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POPSPaperback & Digest Covers Thanks for all your comments have taken the advice offered by several clippers and linked accounts; CM/Amplify link test. Have slowed right down on the clipping, though. Have a great Sunday, y'all
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POPSCiao for now, Clippers Intro & Outro: Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band Hey guys, I thought I might wander over and fiddle with Amplify for awhile - see what occurs. It's more than a wee bit daft to keep CM & Amplify up (especially as I will probably be clipping from the same sources) so this is the last clip from me, here, for the time being. However, I daresay that I will pop by to Pop, now & again. Stay Clippy, Rev. Cakebelly ps. Thanks for all my pops :-)
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POPSBBC opens world's biggest online zoo more: Starting with 370 animals, including four octopuses and a solitary starfish, the databank of clips and still pictures will be reinforced on a daily basis. BBC staff are combing through hundreds of wildlife programmes, from spectaculars such as Planet Earth to regional TV news items, to create an unprecedented collection. Early stars in terms of hits online include Darwin's frog, a tiny resident of forests in Chile, which gives birth through the mouth of the male. The process is repeated in slow motion – another feature of the archive's ability to spy on Earth's wild creatures to an unprecedented extent.
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POPSWinnie-the-Pooh returns with Eeyore in a better mood more at source: Eeyore, like all Milne's characters was based on a toy once owned by his son, Christopher Robin. The toy donkey was given as a Christmas present but over the years the stuffed animal's neck lost its stiffness, taking on a morose appearance which inspired Milne's character. The new book of stories takes on where Milne left off at the end of his final Pooh tale, The House at Pooh Corner, published in 1928. There Christopher Robin was preparing to go to boarding school, leaving his woodland companions to continue their adventures without him. The Return to the Hundred Acre Wood, an extract of which is published today in The Sunday Telegraph, sees Christopher Robin returning from school for his summer holidays to play with his friends.