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Muscle hunk Franco Corelli

The beauty of buff

By Trevor Wood


Published: Monday, November 9, 2009



Dominic D'Agostino lifts an impressive 765 pounds with ease.


Standing in a lab, surrounded by various scientific objects and sprinkled throughout with hyperbaric chambers, a man is explaining what all these instruments of research do. And he does so with a hint of excitement in his voice. Dominic D’Agostino’s voice is soft-spoken and intelligent, which betrays his physical size.

D’Agostino, an assistant professor at the University of South Florida, is the perfect example of what a person can accomplish through hard work and dedication.

Standing 6-foot-1-inch tall and weighing 230 pounds of solid muscle, D’Agostino is an impressive sight to gaze upon. The 34-year-old’s biggest hobby is to body build and he has been doing it naturally for 20 years. He recalls that he first became serious about bodybuilding when, after breaking his leg while playing high school football, the physical results that he began noticing during his rehabilitation sparked his interest in nutrition and weight lifting.He has competed in a couple of all-natural bodybuilding competitions and won; all natural means that the competitors were tested for steroids.

His reasons for going the natural route, in relations to bodybuilding, are simple. “I’m doing this because I want to show people that natural bodybuilding can be a healthy sport and lifestyle,” said D’Agostino.

At the gym he can lift 945 pounds, but in the lab he can explain how the brain controls the body’s functions. Holding a doctorate in physiology and neuroscience, which he received at Rutgers University, his intelligence overshadows his physical prowess.

D’Agostino boasts an IQ of 145. However, he does not feel that a person’s IQ has anything to do with their success or ability to learn. He believes that success is based on the effort of the individual. “I have to be honest, I was a poor student all the way up to my senior year in high school,” said D’Agostino. “And, when I applied myself, I only applied myself when I became interested in science. I challenged myself with chemistry, A.P. courses in chemistry and biology.”

After high school, D’Agostino attended and received an Associate in Arts Degree from a community college. He feels that the smaller, community college offered the same caliber of education as the bigger universities. “To be honest, the education I got at my community college matched that, in some ways it exceeded that, of Rutgers University in that we used the same textbooks. I was taught the same material, with the same level of expertise,” he said “And obviously, community college allowed me to save money.”

After graduating from community college he worked his way through Rutgers University’s undergraduate program by working as a substitute or assistant teacher for special education children and during the summer either worked at a landscaping business or on his parent’s farm. D’Agostino then received a post-doctoral fellowship through Rutgers’ Robert Wood Johnson Medical School that paid for his graduate education.

Other than putting himself through college through his own hard work, D’Agostino has many other accomplishments. His list of accomplishments includes having numerous peer-reviewed papers published, receiving several awards including the Graduate Student Respiratory Physiology Award twice and also having a patent pending in the field of “hyperbaric chamber design and development.”

The road to where he is now was not a smooth one though. Like many, when he was in his early 20s, D’Agostino fell in with a bad crowd. But, through the help of various mentors, his parents and what he called a gradual "come-to-Jesus" transition he was able to get back on the right track. “I caught myself before things got totally out of control...thank God, but did some damage along the way,” said D’Agostino. “This was a learning experience.”

While many believe that science and religion are at odds with each other, D’Agostino does not. He is a scientist, but is also a spiritual person. In fact, he believes that being a scientist has made him a more spiritual individual. Another hobby of his is to read about science as it relates to religion. “The more I understand aspects of science, chemistry, molecular biology, physiology, biology the more appreciation I have for life, the more that I realize that there’s more to life than the complex biochemical processes that we associate with our understanding of science,” said D’Agostino.

D’Agostino’s religious beliefs also inspire him into doing humanitarian work. Soon, through the Christian Fellowship that he belongs to, he will be doing missionary work in Mexico, renovating an orphanage.

Although he may work in a lab all day, conducting serious tests in USF’s molecular pharmacology and physiology department, he also has a playful side. On the refrigerator in his office hangs a hairy little stuffed animal wearing a cape. This is, apparently, known as a Super Monkey. He takes it down, all too happy to demonstrate what it does. Using two of his fingers, he places one just under each of the toys two front hands. With his other hand he pulls the monkey’s tail back, like a slingshot, and releases. The creature flies down the hall, cape blowing, and howling all the way. Smirking, D’Agostino says, “I shoot this at people who walk by my office.”
 
Colt man franco corelli

Does anyone know where i can find any clips, photos etc on the sexy colt man franco corelli? Free clips that is, ha
 
Re: Colt man franco corelli

thanks for the info guys, he's so hot! Anything else anyone knows or finds please let me know.
 
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GOD DAMN!!!!! *|*
 
Franco Corelli.JPG

^^^ He only did solos.

Franco BFTV.JPG

The other Franco Corelli was a fabulous operatic tenor ... :) ...

FRanco snipped.JPG

 
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