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Tried the New Menu at Chipotle?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Crave Chipotle)
Sat Feb 15 14:04:26 2014

Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 11:04:25 -0800
From: "Crave Chipotle" <CraveChipotle@riccadelineqrp.us>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@riccadelineqrp.us>

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A $25 Chipotle Gift Card Cravings Survey Just for You

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the world who are deeply religious, who get enriched by the 
wonderful sense of community by their religion," said Nye, who wore his 
trademark bow tie. "But these same people do not embrace the extraordinary 
view that the Earth is somehow only 6,000 years old."The debate drew 
a few Nye disciples in the audience, including Aaron Swomley, who wore 
a red bowtie and white lab coat. Swomley said he was impressed 
by Ham's presentation and the debate's respectful tone."I think they did 
a good job outlining their own arguments without getting too heated, as 
these debates tend to get," he said.Some scientists had been critical of 
Nye for agreeing to debate the head of a Christian ministry that 
is dismissive of evolution.Jerry Coyne, an evolution professor at the University 
of Chicago, wrote on his blog that "Nye's appearance will be giving 
money to organizations who try to subvert the mission Nye has had 
all his life: science education, particularly of kids." Coyne pointed out 
that the Creation Museum will be selling DVDs of the event.The debate 
was hatched after Nye appeared in an online video in 2012 that 
urged parents not to pass their religious-based doubts about evolution on 
to their children. Ham rebutted Nye's statements with his own online video 
and the two later agreed to share a stage.
Feb. 4, 2014: Creation Museum head Ken Ham, right, speaks during a 
debate on evolution with TV's "Science Guy" Bill Nye, at the Creation 
Museum in Petersburg, Ky.AP Photo/The Courier-Journal, Matt StoneFeb. 4, 
2014: TV's "Science Guy" Bill Nye stand speaks during a debate on 
evolution with Creation Museum head Ken Ham at the Petersburg, Ky. museum.AP 
Photo/Dylan LovanFeb. 4, 2014: Creation Museum head Ken Ham speaks during 
a debate on evolution with TV's "Science Guy" Bill Nye, not shown, 
at the Creation Museum in Petersburg, Ky.AP Photo/The Courier-Journal, Matt 
StonePETERSBURG, Ky.  True to his passionate and animated TV persona, "Science 
Guy" Bill Nye tapped on the podium, threw up his hands and 
noted that science shows the Earth is "billions and billions" of years 
old in a debate at a Kentucky museum known for teaching that 
the planet's age is only 6,000.Nye was debating Creation Museum founder 
Ken Ham and promoting science in the snappy way that made him 
a pop culture staple as host of "Bill Nye The Science Guy" 
in the 1990s.The event was meant to explore the age old question, 
"How did we get here?" from the perspectives of faith and science.Ham, 
an Australian native who has built a thriving ministry in Kentucky, said 
he trusts the story of creation presented by the Bible."The Bible is 
the word of God," Ham said. "I admit that's where I start 
from."- Ken Ham, founder of the Creation MuseumNye delivered a passionate 
speech on scie


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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">," Bradshaw said.That's when a sergeant 
fired three times, once to the torso and twice on the lower 
part of the body. The man was taken to Delray Medical Center, 
where he died.The injured police officer and the teen were also taken 
to the hospital. Their conditions were not available. Bradshaw said the 
10-year-old boy injured himself trying to go under the gate to get 
away from the man.The sheriff said investigators are trying to figure out 
the man's identity and to get some background information on about him.Bradshaw 
said the man was "obviously on some kind of narcotics to act 
like this.""The deputies had to do what they had to do to 
disable this guy so he didn't get into this gated community and 
wreak havoc in there," Bradshaw said.The incident is reminiscent of a 2012 
attack in Miami in which a naked man attacked a homeless man 
and chewed off much of his face. The man, Rudy Eugene, was 
shot and killed by a Miami police officer. Witnesses said he had 
been swinging from a light pole minutes before the attack. Lab tests 
found only marijuana in his system.The victim in the Miami attack, Ronald 
Poppo, lost his left eye, his nose and most of the surrounding 
skin.
 A Syracuse man had his home seized after he paid back $9,877 
in city taxes over a six-month period -- but came up $936 
short."I tried so hard. I tried so hard to make these payments," 
Calvin James, who found out he lost the home when he walked 
into City Hall on Dec. 6 with a $1,500 check, told The 
Syracuse Post-Standard. The property had been seized Dec. 4.The paper reported 
that the city launched an aggressive foreclosure campaign in 2012. The program 
puts the troubled properties into the Syracuse-area land bank, which either 
sells or demolishes them. James, who paid $8,500 in 2009 for the 
property, is currently renting his old home for $500 a month, the 
report said.The city told the paper it's sorry the way James' story 
worked out."This guy was given all the proper notifications and just came 
up short," Paul Driscoll, commissioner of neighborhood and business development, 
told the paper. "It's not something that I think that were going 
to request the land bank to return."James, 61, is originally from Guyana 
and worked for years as a bus mechanic in Brooklyn, the report 
said. He cashed out his retirement and made a few bad investments 
in Syracuse, the report said.
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