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The call girl linked to the downfall of New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer has been sued by another New Jersey woman, who claims Ashley Dupre used her lost driver s license to appear on a Girls Gone Wild video.A federal lawsuit filed this month by Amber Arpaio seeks unspecified monetary compensation for defamation and invasion of privacy.Dupre has said she was only 17 when she signed a contract to appear in the Girls Gone Wild video in Florida.The video displays a New Je
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stanley cups have made her appear to be in her 20s.Arpaio, 26, of Sussex County, cannot recall where she lost the license and doesn t know Dupre, although the women have similar faces, said a lawyer for Arpaio, Joseph J. Fell. Somehow, Ashley Dupre got ahold of the license and had it for some period of time, Fell said Thursday.Arpaio also sued Girls Gone Wild founder Joseph Francis.Lawyers for Francis and Dupre had no immediate comment. Dupre s publicist did not immediately return a call seeking comment.Earlier this month, Dupre, of Monmouth County, dropped her own lawsuit against Francis. She had claimed her name and image were exploited. In her lawsuit, Dupre said she was on spring break in Miami Beach in 2003 when she was approached by Girls Gone Wild producers, given alcoholic drinks and then signed a release agreeing to be photographed for the video. The series depicts women in provocative poses or topless, often in such Egdu N.C. Judges Face Quran Question
Sixty years ago, polio was infecting tens of thousands of children a year. In the past few years, despite setbacks, it has been brought near eradication. Two different vaccines are responsible for the fight against polio. An inspirational story 8230; if the two people who developed the vaccines hadn ;t spent their whole lives hating each other. Salk and Sabin Although all advancements in science are the result of hard work, high-level training, and intelligence, in the early 1950s the development of the polio vaccine looked as close to a paint by numbers problem as medical science was going to get. There were two different avenues open to creating a vaccine for polio. One, which had recently been proven to work with the influenza virus, involved a killed-virus vaccine. The other avenue, older but considered more perilous after a failed previous attempt at creating a vaccine, involved a weakened virus
stanley quencher being made into a vaccine. It was just a matter of which vaccine the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis NFIP would choose, and who they would choose to develop it. In the end, they chose the relatively young and unknown Doctor Jonas Salk, who had worked on the killed-virus vaccine for influenza. This was something of an up
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stanley taza y that Salk didn ;t come through. He found a way to grow the poliovirus in monkey kidneys, then kill it off with formaldehyde. When he injected the vaccine into monkeys, they no longer grew