Wednesday, April 18, 2007

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around the park - including by the children's playground - and called police on his cell phone.

"There's a man out here dressed up in a wig and women's two-piece bikini freaking people out in the park," he told a 911 dispatcher.

"It's inappropriate and I'd like somebody to come check this guy out. The guy is actually trying to leave the park now."

Mason Police Officer Scott Miller pulled the truck over. His report states:

"I observed Cole to be wearing a very skimpy woman's ... bikini with two tan water balloons taped to the top to simulate two woman's breasts and a pair of pink Speedo flip-flop sandals."

Cole was unsteady and twice fell against the truck, Miller reported. Cole also fumbled through his wallet and handed him a debit card and a Lowe's credit card when asked for his driver's license.

The officer looked through the wallet but could not find his driver's license, although Cole did provide a Social Security number.

"I asked Cole what he was doing wearing a woman's bikini at the park where families frequent," Miller wrote. "Cole did state he was headed to a 'gay bar' in Dayton to perform as a woman for a $10,000 prize."

Miller reported smelling alcohol on Cole, who also had slurred speech. Police said they found an open, half-empty 40-ounce bottle of Budweiser in Cole's truck. They also found a black gym bag with more blond wigs, women's bikinis, long silver go-go boots and other women's garments street blowjobs.

Cole's blood-alcohol test registered 0.174, more than twice Ohio's legal limit of 0.08.

Wayne Township officials issued a statement saying Cole would be placed on administrative leave while the case continues. Cole has been a firefighter with the township since August 2000.

"Wayne Township does not condone the accused activities related to this incident," according to the statement signed by Donald "Gus" Edwards, trustee president, and Fire Chief Paul Scherer. "We expect our employees, that are providing a service to the community, to be good honest, reputable citizens."
MANCHESTER'S best-known doctor has attacked video website YouTube for 'censoring' his educational films showing people how to check for signs of cancer.

Didsbury GP Chris Steele, well known from his appearances on TV's This Morning, has hit out after bosses of the US website decided to restrict his breast and testicular cancer prevention videos so only people aged over 18 can watch them.

CLICK the video links (top) to watch...

Dr Steele is believed to have made TV history in 1999 by broadcasting live self-examinations of women's breasts and men's testicles in a bid to teach viewers how to detect the early signs of cancer.

Leading cancer doctors, arecampaigning to save 500 lives a year across Greater Manchester by encouraging people to go to their doctor as soon as they experience cancer symptoms. They backed Dr Steele's approach.

He is outraged by the decision to restrict access to his films, especially as he says testicular cancer can affect teenage boys. It is understood the videos fall foul of the website's nudity rules.

'Fatal'

Dr Steele, said: "At the beginning of the year I posted two videos on YouTube.com, showing how to check for signs of breast cancer and testicular cancer.

"Both conditions can be fatal, but early detection improves your chances of survival. I often feature these examinations on ITV's This Morning, because they can save your life street blowjobs.

"I also posted them on YouTube, so they could reach more people around the world." Dr Steele is appealing for visitors to his website to sign a petition protesting at the `censorship'.

Dr Mike Leahy, testicular cancer consultant at Manchester's Christie Hospital, said: "We support Dr Steele's initiative to encourage awareness, especially as taboos and embarrassment contribute to delays in people seeing their GP."

This Morning viewers watched as Russian Natasha Demkina told Dr Steele he was suffering from a number of medical conditions, including kidney stones, an ailment of the gall bladder, and an enlarged liver and pancreas.

Medical tests showed he had enlarged lymph nodes in his abdomen which can be a sign of early bowel cancer but doctors later gave him the all clear.
THE launch of a Durex campaign to recruit condom testers proved more popular in the UK than in France.

It attracted 16,000 applicants in the UK in a single day - 2,000 more than on launch day across the Channel.

The condom brand was inundated with UK volunteers when recruitment started on Thursday last week.

By end of play the following day, Durex had received 23,000 applications.

The firm wants a panel of 5,000 people to report their experiences of using its condoms and lubricants.

Participants will get the products free of charge, plus entry into a STG500 ($A1,219) cash prize draw.

Durex spokeswoman Sarah-Louise Heslop said: "Clearly our condom tester campaign has caught the imagination of the British public.

"We're delighted that the first day of the campaign attracted more than 16,000 applications and really pleased that the British are so keen to test out our sexual enhancement products." street blowjobs

The company is inviting men and women of all ages, ethnic groups and sexual orientation to apply via its website.

It wants a mix of people who are single, married and in couples to be on the panel.

They will report via an online questionnaire how the Durex condoms and Play products help their sex lives and whether they are enjoyable.

The firm will use the information in the development of future products.
a tall and fit former skater boy who likes to hit the San Francisco club scene. Over his years of partying, he's been in relationships with women and men. But now that he's 29, Henry says he knows one thing for certain: "I don't like sex."

Henry is asexual — a term used to describe a person who has no desire for sex. According to a study published in The Journal of Sex Research in 2004, it's not as rare as you might think: One in every 100 respondents said they had never felt sexually attracted to anyone at all.

(Click here to learn more about Henry and the rest of the asexual community.)

Unlike those who choose to abstain by choice — because of, say, religious reasons — the "asexy" claim they have no say in the matter. They're simply not hardwired to want sex. "I can walk down the street and say, 'Oh yeah, she's really pretty,' or, 'Oh yeah, he's really cute.' But that doesn't mean, 'Oh yeah, I've got to go get some of that,' " Henry said, laughing. "It's totally not on that level."

The heart of the asexual street blowjobs community is the Asexual Visibility and Education Network at Asexuality.org. AVEN was founded by David Jay, now 24 and working for a nonprofit in San Francisco. When he was as young as 14, Jay said he "didn't know why everyone else was making such a big deal about kissing people and having sex with people."

By the time he was a senior in high school, Jay decided to label himself "asexual" — even though, at the time, a Google search for that word only produced scientific studies about amoeba reproduction (" 'Human amoeba' became a slang term for talking about asexual people," Jay said).

"It's not a choice," Jay said. "This is the way I was born. It's not a problem. There's no reason this should limit my life."

In 2001, while in college, Jay decided to reach out and create an online HQ for people like him. Since forming AVEN, Jay — still a virgin and intensely dedicated to the community — has seen the membership grow to include more than 10,000 members in the United States alone. (There are also 12 foreign-language sites, the most active of which is based in Germany.) Users have notably "asexy" handles like littlefuzzy, Goonie and FelineFanatic and often sport overtly youthful icons like snowmen, Shamu, Curious George and Emma Watson from the "Harry Potter" movies. AVEN sells merch ranging from a teddy bear T-shirt that reads "The Only One I Sleep With" to Jay's favorite item, the "No Sex Please" thong.

With sex out of the street blowjobs picture, dating obviously becomes a challenge. Some asexuals are happy having a strong network of friends — Henry lives with a married gay couple and a straight woman who he says are "just like family" — while some seek out "romantic" relationships. But what does an asexual romantic relationship look like?

"You can take the sex out of relationships and they can have just as much power," Jay insisted. "Because sex isn't just about sex. Sex is about power. It's about people feeling validated. It's about having fun. ... And those are all things that I still do and I still want in my life. ... To me, intimacy is something that happens in almost all my relationships." street blowjobs

Jay is convinced that a relationship based on trust, co