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TransUnion, Equifax, Experian Credit Scores Available

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Free Score 360)
Mon Jul 29 23:49:26 2013

Date: Mon, 29 Jul 2013 20:49:23 -0700
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Free Score 360" <FreeScore360@jawabucahmso.net>

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 ave 
the painful past behind.Powell endured the explosive battle over desegregation 
in Boston in the 1970s. Tears come to her eyes when she 
talks about how it took her decades to return to the place 
where she never felt safe as an African-American seventh-grader."It was 
scary because of what you were going into, getting bricks thrown at 
your bus. I remember the bus windows being broken," said Powell, now 
48.Nearly four decades later, Powell's native city also is still working 
to move forward from the legacy of the school busing crisis. Last 
year, Mayor Thomas Menino created an advisory group whose aim was to 
work toward putting students back in neighborhood schools. And last month, 
school officials agreed to do away with the last vestiges of the 
desegregation-based school assignment system, beginning in 2014.But raw 
feelings remain from that divisive time. And to explore and mend the 
divisions, the nonprofit Union of Minority Neighborhoods has been holding 
public story circles across Boston where participants like Powell can open 
up about their own experiences.Organizers hope the airing of voices will 
help people of different races and economic classes learn from the city's 
busing past so they can fight together for access to quality schools 
for all students. Project director Donna Bivens said the exercises are designed 
to be about listening and discussing, but not judging each other's stories."I 
think that we can't move forward, looki
 WASHINGTON  Amid mounting tensions with North Korea, the Pentagon has delayed 
an intercontinental ballistic missile test that had been planned for next 
week at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, a senior defense official 
told The Associated Press on Saturday.The official said Defense Secretary 
Chuck Hagel decided to put off the long-planned Minuteman 3 test until 
sometime next month because of concerns the launch could be misinterpreted 
and exacerbate the Korean crisis. Hagel made the decision Friday, the official 
said.The test was not connected to the ongoing U.S.-South Korean military 
exercises that have been going on in that region and have stoked 
North Korean anger and fueled an escalation in threatening actions and rhetoric.North 
Korea's military warned earlier this week that it was authorized to attack 
the U.S. using "smaller, lighter and diversified" nuclear weapons. And South 
Korean officials say North Korea has moved at least one missile with 
"considerable range" to its east coast -- possibly the untested Musudan 
missile, believed to have a range of 1,800 miles. U.S. officials have 
said the missile move suggests a North Korean launch could be imminent 
and thus fuels worries in the region.Pyongyang's moves come on the heels 
of the North's nuclear test in February, and the launch in December 
of a long-range North Korean rocket that could potentially hit the continental 
U.S. Added to that is the uncertainty surrounding the int

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> Feb. 21, 2013: In this photo,  a new inmate housing unit 
is seen near completion at the Madera County Jail in Madera, Calif.APSACRAMENTO, 
Calif.  A federal judge on Friday rejected Gov. Jerry Brown's bid 
to regain state control of inmates' mental health care after 18 years 
of court oversight and billions of dollars spent to improve treatment.U.S. 
District Judge Lawrence Karlton in Sacramento ruled that the state failed 
to prove that it is providing the level of care required by 
the U.S. Constitution for the state's more than 32,000 mentally ill inmates."This 
court finds that ongoing constitutional violations remain in this action 
and the prospective relief ordered by this court remains necessary to remedy 
those violations," the judge said in his 68-page decision.The decision is 
a blow to the Democratic governor's attempts to end nearly two decades 
of expensive federal lawsuits that influence nearly every aspect of California's 
prison system. It also undermines Brown's efforts to lift a separate court 
order that otherwise will force the state to reduce its prison population 
by nearly 10,000 by year's end.Brown has promised to appeal."The state's 
lawyers are reviewing the order and we will send out reaction as 
soon as possible," Jeffrey Callison, spokesman for the Department of Corrections 
and Rehabilitation, said in an email.The governor's office did not immediately 
respond to a request for comment.The judge and the attorneys for both 
si
 File: June 19, 2010: Assorted shotguns are displayed on a table at 
a gun and knife show in White Plains, N.Y.,APA top White House 
official acknowledged Sunday that President Obama knew some of his gun-control 
initiatives would likely be rejected but defended his efforts and called 
on Congress to do the right thing.The president pushed very hard, White 
House adviser Dan Pfeiffer said on Fox News Sunday. We knew all 
of the (proposals) would not pass right away.With a proposed ban on 
semi-automatic weapons and high-capacity gun magazines off the table for 
now, Obama appears to be focusing his efforts, including the garnering of 
public support, on getting Congress to agree to universal background checks 
for gun buyers.Pfeiffer said the president has marshaled people to his side 
and polls show a large majority of the public supports background checks.You 
cannot get 90 percent of the people to agree on the weather, 
Pfeiffer told Fox. The question is whether Congress is going to do 
the right thing.A final Senate bill was expected to be released this 
week, when Congress returns from Spring Break. But the voting could be 
delayed as senators wrangle over the background check issue. The legislation 
would come about four months after a mass shooting at a Newtown, 
Conn., elementary school in which 20 first-graders and six adults were killed.Pfeiffer 
said the president agrees with the efforts so far of Senate Majority 
Leader Harry Reid and other sena
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