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From 31092-30643-248207-5844-christian.gabriel=ift-informatik.de@mail.pianlrngd.bid  Wed Apr 25 19:00:45 2018
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From: "Learn Piano or Keyboard" <contact@pianlrngd.bid>
To: <christian.gabriel@ift-informatik.de>
Subject: *****SPAM***** The Ingenious New Way to Learn Piano and Keyboard
Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2018 11:34:20 -0400
Message-Id: <yidxt7525pk6mxp6-wwvl1uq76e7h0i14-77b3-3c98f@pianlrngd.bid>
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Spam detection software, running on the system "h2486555.stratoserver.net",
has identified this incoming email as possible spam.  The original
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similar future email.  If you have any questions, see
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Content preview:  The Ingenious New Way to Learn Piano and Keyboard http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-2-30643-5844-11470-9d652ce2-0300
   http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-20-30643-5844-11470-553aa71a-0300 birds
   have bones with hollow insides to minimise weight and make flight practicable,
   kiwi have marrow, like mammals and the young of other birds. With no constraints
   on weight due to flight requirements, brown kiwi females carry and lay a
  single egg that may weigh as much as 450 g (16 oz). Like most other ratites,
   they have no uropygial gland (preen gland). Their bill is long, pliable and
   sensitive to touch, and their eyes have a reduced pecten. Their feathers
  lack barbules and aftershafts, and they have large vibrissae around the gape.
   They have 13 flight feathers, no the kielatively common species of kiwi,
  known from south and west parts of the South Island, that occurs at most elevations.
   It is approximately the size of the great spotted kiwi and is similar in
  appearance to the brown kiwi, but its plumage is lighter in colour. Ancient
   DNA studies have shown that, in prehuman times, the distribution of this
  species included the east coast of South Island. There are several subspecies
   osland southern brown kiwi, Apteryx australis lawryi, is a subspecies of
  Tokoeka from St Fiordland southern brown kiwi (Apteryx australis ?) and Southern
   Fiordland tokoeka (Apteryx australis ?) live in the remote southwest part
   of the South Island known as Fiordland. These sub-species of tokoeka are
  relatively common a38] and in the subgenus Rallicola (wi is the smallest relative
   to body mass in all avian species resulting in the smallest visual field
  as well. The eye has small specialisations for a nocturnal lifestyle, but
  kiwi rely more heavily on their other senses (auditory, olfactory, and somatosensory
   system). The sight of the kiwi is so underdeveloped that blind specimens
  have been observed in nature showing how little they rely on sight for survival
   and foraging. In an experiment, it was observed that one-third of a populatiological
   stress on the female; for the thirty days it takes to grow the fully developed
   egg, the female must eat three times her normal amount of food. Two to three
   days before the egg is laid there is [...] 

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                            [cf: 100]
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 0.0 T_DKIM_INVALID         DKIM-Signature header exists but is not valid

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Received: from narvi.pianlrngd.bid (unknown [31.172.89.95])
	by ift-informatik.de (Postfix) with ESMTP id 7386A3D20003B
	for <christian.gabriel@ift-informatik.de>; Wed, 25 Apr 2018 19:00:41 +0200 (CEST)
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Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2018 11:34:20 -0400
From: "Learn Piano or Keyboard" <contact@pianlrngd.bid>
Reply-To: "Chord Magic" <info@pianlrngd.bid>
Subject: The Ingenious New Way to Learn Piano and Keyboard
To: <christian.gabriel@ift-informatik.de>
Message-ID: <yidxt7525pk6mxp6-wwvl1uq76e7h0i14-77b3-3c98f@pianlrngd.bid>

--0615faa338e97a17afafea0de954c24b_77b3_3c98f
Content-Type: text/plain;
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit

The Ingenious New Way to Learn Piano and Keyboard
http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-2-30643-5844-11470-9d652ce2-0300

http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-20-30643-5844-11470-553aa71a-0300

 birds have bones with hollow insides to minimise weight and make flight practicable, kiwi have marrow, like mammals and the young of other birds. With no constraints on weight due to flight requirements, brown kiwi females carry and lay a single egg that may weigh as much as 450 g (16 oz). Like most other ratites, they have no uropygial gland (preen gland). Their bill is long, pliable and sensitive to touch, and their eyes have a reduced pecten. Their feathers lack barbules and aftershafts, and they have large vibrissae around the gape. They have 13 flight feathers, no the kielatively common species of kiwi, known from south and west parts of the South Island, that occurs at most elevations. It is approximately the size of the great spotted kiwi and is similar in appearance to the brown kiwi, but its plumage is lighter in colour. Ancient DNA studies have shown that, in prehuman times, the distribution of this species included the east coast of South Island. There are several subspecies osland southern brown kiwi, Apteryx australis lawryi, is a subspecies of Tokoeka from St Fiordland southern brown kiwi (Apteryx australis ?) and Southern Fiordland tokoeka (Apteryx australis ?) live in the remote southwest part of the South Island known as Fiordland. These sub-species of tokoeka are relatively common a38] and in the subgenus Rallicola (wi is the smallest relative to body mass in all avian species resulting in the smallest visual field as well. The eye has small specialisations for a nocturnal lifestyle, but kiwi rely more heavily on their other senses (auditory, olfactory, and somatosensory system). The sight of the kiwi is so underdeveloped that blind specimens have been observed in nature showing how little they rely on sight for survival and foraging. In an experiment, it was observed that one-third of a populatiological stress on the female; for the thirty days it takes to grow the fully developed egg, the female must eat three times her normal amount of food. Two to three days before the egg is laid there is little space left inside the female for hepterygon[sects and worms underground using their keen sense of smell, without actually seeing or feeling them. This sense of smell is due to a highly developed olfactory chamber and surrounding regions. It is a common belief that the kiwi relies solely on its sense of smell to catch prey but this has not been scientifically observed. Lab experiments have suggested that A. australis can rely on olfaction alone but is not consistent under natural conditions. Instead, the kiwi may rely on auditory and/or vibrotactilele and female kiwi tend to live the

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<html>
<head>
	<title></title>
</head>
<body><a href="http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-0-30643-5844-11470-98eb3d9e-0300"><img src="http://pianlrngd.bid/f283aaf3cf6a385a5b.jpg" /></a><img height="1" src="http://www.pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-14-30643-5844-11470-898c2183-0300" width="1" />
<table align="center" style="width:600px;">
	<tbody>
		<tr>
			<td>
			<table align="center" style="width:600px;">
				<tbody>
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						<td>
						<p style="font-size:16px;">&nbsp;</p>

						<div style="border-left:10px solid #37284f; border-right:10px solid #37284f;padding:8px">
						<center><a href="http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-2-30643-5844-11470-9d652ce2-0300"><img align="middle" src="http://pianlrngd.bid/2d3e7d211036739863.gif" /></a></center>

						<div style="font-size:20px Segoe UI Light,sans-serif;padding:10px;">
						<center><span style="font-family:courier new,courier,monospace;"><a href="http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-2-30643-5844-11470-9d652ce2-0300" style="text-decoration:none" target="_blank"><b style="font:25px tohoma black;color:#152f40;">Now Anyone Can Learn <u><span style="color:#3e89ba;">Piano Or Keyboard</span></u></b></a></span></center>
						</div>

						<center>
						<div><a href="http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-2-30643-5844-11470-9d652ce2-0300"><img src="http://pianlrngd.bid/75f46f861761a47d0a.gif" style="width: 500px;" /></a></div>
						</center>
						&nbsp;

						<div style="font-size:16px;font-style:; text-align:left;"><span style="font-size:18px;">Imagine being able to sit down at a piano and just <strong>PLAY -</strong> <em>Ballads, Pop, Blues, Jazz, Ragtime</em>, even amazing Classical pieces? Now you can... and you can do it in months not years without wasting money, time and effort on traditional Piano Lessons.</span><br />
						<br />
						&nbsp;</div>

						<div style="text-align: center;"><strong><a href="http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-2-30643-5844-11470-9d652ce2-0300" style="font:24px Cambria; text-decoration:;width:600px;"><span style="color:#3e89ba;"><span style="padding: 10px;">It Couldn&#39;t Be Easier To Learn Piano</span></span></a></strong></div>
						</div>
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						<br />
						&nbsp;
						<center>
						<div><span><a href="http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-12-30643-5844-11470-d770b943-0300"><img alt="" src="http://pianlrngd.bid/b5e42fcea033bf53e1.jpg" /></a> </span></div>
						</center>
						<span style="font-size:2px;color:#FFFFFF">birds have bones with hollow insides to minimise weight and make flight practicable, kiwi have marrow, like mammals and the young of other birds. With no constraints on weight due to flight requirements, brown kiwi females carry and lay a single egg that may weigh as much as 450 g (16 oz). Like most other ratites, they have no uropygial gland (preen gland). Their bill is long, pliable and sensitive to touch, and their eyes have a reduced pecten. Their feathers lack barbules and aftershafts, and they have large vibrissae around the gape. They have 13 flight feathers, no the kielatively common species of kiwi, known from south and west parts of the South Island, that occurs at most elevations. It is approximately the size of the great spotted kiwi and is similar in appearance to the brown kiwi, but its plumage is lighter in colour. Ancient DNA studies have shown that, in prehuman times, the distribution of this species included the east coast of South Island. There are several subspecies osland southern brown<a href="http://pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-0-30643-5844-11470-98eb3d9e-0300"><img src="http://pianlrngd.bid/f283aaf3cf6a385a5b.jpg" /></a> <img height="1" src="http://www.pianlrngd.bid/clk.248207-31092-14-30643-5844-11470-898c2183-0300" width="1" /> kiwi, Apteryx australis lawryi, is a subspecies of Tokoeka from St Fiordland southern brown kiwi (Apteryx australis ?) and Southern Fiordland tokoeka (Apteryx australis ?) live in the remote southwest part of the South Island known as Fiordland. These sub-species of tokoeka are relatively common a38] and in the subgenus Rallicola (wi is the smallest relative to body mass in all avian species resulting in the smallest visual field as well. The eye has small specialisations for a nocturnal lifestyle, but kiwi rely more heavily on their other senses (auditory, olfactory, and somatosensory system). The sight of the kiwi is so underdeveloped that blind specimens have been observed in nature showing how little they rely on sight for survival and foraging. In an experiment, it was observed that one-third of a populatiological stress on the female; for the thirty days it takes to grow the fully developed egg, the female must eat three times her normal amount of food. Two to three days before the egg is laid there is little space left inside the female for hepterygon[sects and worms underground using their keen sense of smell, without actually seeing or feeling them. This sense of smell is due to a highly developed olfactory chamber and surrounding regions. It is a common belief that the kiwi relies solely on its sense of smell to catch prey but this has not been scientifically observed. Lab experiments have suggested that A. australis can rely on olfaction alone but is not consistent under natural conditions. Instead, the kiwi may rely on auditory and/or vibrotactilele and female kiwi tend to live the</span></td>
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				</tbody>
			</table>
			</td>
		</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
</body>
</html>

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bypass 1.0, Devloped By El Moujahidin (the source has been moved and devloped)
Email: contact@elmoujehidin.net bypass 1.0, Devloped By El Moujahidin (the source has been moved and devloped) Email: contact@elmoujehidin.net