[43777] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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If sugar is a problem to you read this.

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (HarvardDept.)
Thu May 28 20:04:22 2015

Date: Thu, 28 May 2015 17:04:19 -0700
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
From: "HarvardDept." <HarvardDept.@chartine.work>

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Read it.



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          <span style="font-size: 9px ">109 E. 17th Suite 4552 - Cheyenne, WY 82001 </span> 
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d shortly after Arizona's heavily scrutinized immigration enforcement law was passed in 
April 2010.The program's supporters have call challenges to the courses an attack 
on the state's Hispanic population, while critics say the program demonizes white 
people as oppressors of Hispanics.Huppenthal ordered a review of the program when 
he took office in January after his predecessor, Tom Horne, said the 
Mexican-American Studies program violated state law and that Huppenthal would have to 
decide whether to withhold funding.Huppenthal, a Republican, had voted in favor of 
the ethnic studies law as a state senator before becoming the state's 
schools chief.

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ion in the Middle East as part of a global war on 
terror, a conflict that is hard to define by conventional measures of 
success."This is not a war on a particular place or a particular 
force," he said.Bush himself illustrated the perils of celebrating milestones in the 
war, Mrozek said, when he landed on an aircraft carrier and hailed 
the end of major combat operations in Iraq behind a "Mission Accomplished" 
banner in May 2003. U.S. troops remained in Iraq for 8 1/2 
more years, and Bush was criticized over the banner.The benchmarks were clearer 
in previous wars. After World War II, parades marked Japan's surrender. After 
the Gulf War, celebrations marked the troops' return after Iraqi forces were 
driven out of Kuwait.The only mass celebrations of U.S. military activities since 
Sept. 11, 2001, were largely spontaneous: Large crowds gathered in Times Square 
and outside the White House in April after Usama bin Laden was 
killed.At the same time, Iraq veterans aren

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MyFoxChicago.comDecember 27, 2011: Onlookers stand outside the scene of a shooting in 
Chicago.CHICAGO  Two people were killed and five more wounded after a 
gunman opened fire in a Chicago fast food restaurant Tuesday night.Police say 
the gunman appeared to be arguing with someone, who he then chased 
into the Church's Chicken in Englewood. He then began shooting.Police say two 
victims died at the scene and four others were currently in the 
hospital. A fifth person was reportedly injured, but their condition is unknown.The 
survivors included a 16-year-old boy, a 17-year-old boy and a 51-year-old man, 
who were all shot in the legs, and a 58-year-old man who 
suffered multiple gunshots wounds, MyFoxChicago.com reported.Friends at the scene said one of 
the dead was a 17-year-old junior at Prosser High School. "He didn't 
bother nobody," said Dimitrious Doughty. "This is crazy. They just took him. 
I don't understand."The gunman has not been arrested and police do not 


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nd he adds, "Recent estimates indicate that veterans comprise about one quarter 
of the total adult homeless population."A new foundation would not replace the 
many existing organizations that already offer help to veterans. Rather, it would 
create a kind of clearinghouse of information to make it easier for 
veterans to find help that already exists."Without this type of collaboration," Bennet 
says, "in some communities, veterans can fall through the cracks in the 
systems that support them."Bennet says a working model for the foundation already 
exists in Colorado Springs, a city home to five major military installations. 
Retired Air Force Major Gen. G. Wesley Clark (not to be confused 
with retired U.S. Army General Wesley K. Clark who ran for President 
in 2004) says the Colorado Springs region is a community that understands 
the needs of America's veterans."Well I think it's important to understand up 
front that in the United States approximately only 1 percent (

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MONTERREY, Mexico  Police in the northern Mexico state of Nuevo Leon 
said Tuesday that information provided by arrested members of a kidnapping gang 
has led them to at least seven bodies found buried in shallow 
graves or dumped in a well.By nightfall, Nuevo Leon state police had 
found seven sets of human remains around the cities of Linares and 
Montemorelos, near the border with Tamaulipas state. Four bodies were found burned 
or half-buried, and three others had apparently been thrown down a well.A 
Nuevo Leon state detective who was not authorized to be quoted by 
name said information from a band of five kidnappers detained over the 
weekend by soldiers led police to the bodies.The soldiers detained the gang 
after a woman's relatives alerted a passing army patrol that she was 
being kidnapped.Nuevo Leon security spokesman Jorge Domene said the gang worked for 
the Zetas drug cartel.Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon have been the scene of 
bloody turf battles between the Z

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le on the same stretch of road. The victims have been identified 
as two Mexico City residents, but there was no immediate information on 
the motive in those killings either.


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