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Completely screwed up by Pascal Volk
Via Flickr:
These too soft Torx T5 screws are used to secure the base cover of the Dell Precision 5570.
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📍 montaña rusa.
' no necesitas tener visiones proféticas para saber que está a nada de caerse ' menciona desde abajo del lugar, donde nueva ronda parecía comenzar. una línea se formaba para entrar a dicha atracción. ' si piensas subir, ten cuidado ' culmina recogiendo una tuerca que está en el piso y, que por supuesto, atribuye a la atracción que parece desmoronarse. ' ¿has visto destino final? '
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May I make a suggestion? Faramom.
if there's a dadworth there's a faramom, obviously~♥!
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el señor piernas largas puede verse bien en cualquier pantalón corto o falda o vestido
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acompáñame esta noche, ya después te vas,
deja que corran lágrimas en esta triste soledad
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Friday, September 8: Accept, "Bucket Full of Hate"
By the time “Bucket Full of Hate” closed Blood of the Nations, Accept had fully proven they were once again a viable and vital act: 14 years after Predator capped their first reunion in rather hapless fashion, Wolf Hoffmann and Peter Baltes more than proved they could not only function as Accept without Udo Dirkschneider, but actually thrive. Perhaps best and most of all, Mark Tornillo assumed the frontman role with total confidence and hunger, positioning himself as the most logical choice to resurrect the brand and ensuring that nobody would bring up David Reece or Eat the Heat. And like the rest of the album, “Bucket Full of Hate” was a chunky, loud, aggressive and efficient crusher with classic gang vocals, grooving but unyielding drumming and thick riffing that burst out of speakers thanks to crystalline (maybe too much so) production from Andy Sneap. It didn’t reinvent anything for Accept, and along with the rest of Blood of the Nations its rapturous reception was a bit overstated, but it was the first time in a very long time that there was new Accept music that could at least stand alongside their classic work, and more to the point it achieved its primary objective, which was to show that these guys could still show up and deliver the goods, even without their iconic frontman.
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Mark Tornillo - Accept, TT Quick
born 08.06.1954
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