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Has your spouse ever had a DUI?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (ICM)
Fri Aug 2 03:06:51 2013

From: "ICM" <ICM@hedanzmtc.info>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Fri, 2 Aug 2013 00:06:46 -0700

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Find out the complete criminal truth about anyone!

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 One exhibit is a blood-stained gray shirt that belonged 
to a slain protester. It is emblazoned with, "He left his shirt 
to you. Don't leave his president."During a funeral, a weeping wife took 
the stage at Rabaah to recount the last words of her late 
husband, telling the crowd how he saw the Prophet Muhammad in his 
sleep and was invited to hold prayers with him."You think I am 
lying? I swear to God, no," the wife said as she wept. 
Her words triggered chants of "No God but Allah"  while many 
of her listeners held back tears.Photos of bloodied faces of slain protesters 
are posted in every corner and tent. Some banners provide information such 
as the dead demonstrator's background, hometown and profession."The more 
blood spilled, the more people join in," said Saad el-Husseini, a former 
governor of Kafr el-Sheikh province and prominent Muslim Brotherhood figure. 
The security forces "are very stupid because they don't take gradual measures 
in their repression."But the group is facing a bigger challenge than state 
repression: loss of popular support. Last week, millions marched in demonstrations 
giving a mandate to charismatic military chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi 
  upon his request   to confront "terrorism" and potential 
violence.Losing public sympathy in Egypt, the Rabaah tent city is plastered 
with signs in English appealing to the outside world. A large banner 
reads: "No to military rule." Many tents bear signs that suggest the 
pro
 cell regeneration. 
Of the mice that didnt receive the proteins, 100 percent died within 
two weeks of radiation treatment. But of the mice who did receive 
the proteins, 50 to 75 percent survived the lethal chemotherapy dose, and 
subsequently, the cancer. Even more encouragingly, the increase of SLIT2 
and R-SPONDIN1 in the body showed no toxic side effects and did 
not seem to have an effect on tumor size or sensitivity. While 
Geng hopes to increase patient survival to 100 percent, he is eager 
to move his experiment on to clinical trials, arguing that this treatment 
could serve as a last resort for many metastatic cancer patients.Were talking 
about later stage metastasis, Geng said. If its early stage, you simply 
do surgery to remove it. But later stage metastasis, thats the clinical 
challenge. With patients more tolerable to chemotherapy, you can use more 
chemo more frequently Currently they dont give a patient a very high 
dosage; its a low dosage constantly, day after day. What we find 
is if you give a very high dosage, treatment is a lot 
more effective.Not only could adding this protein potentially help patients 
survive higher doses of chemotherapy, but it may also help mitigate the 
toxic side effects of radiation, making patients less sick and much more 
comfortable throughout their cancer treatments. With so many promising implications, 
Geng hopes his findings will mark a turning point in the fight 
against cancer.Under the current th

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<strong><center><a href="http://www.hedanzmtc.info/1734/5/27/15/70.11tt71675797AAF10.html"><H3>Is your arrest record public?</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> One exhibit is a blood-stained gray shirt that belonged 
to a slain protester. It is emblazoned with, "He left his shirt 
to you. Don't leave his president."During a funeral, a weeping wife took 
the stage at Rabaah to recount the last words of her late 
husband, telling the crowd how he saw the Prophet Muhammad in his 
sleep and was invited to hold prayers with him."You think I am 
lying? I swear to God, no," the wife said as she wept. 
Her words triggered chants of "No God but Allah"  while many 
of her listeners held back tears.Photos of bloodied faces of slain protesters 
are posted in every corner and tent. Some banners provide information such 
as the dead demonstrator's background, hometown and profession."The more 
blood spilled, the more people join in," said Saad el-Husseini, a former 
governor of Kafr el-Sheikh province and prominent Muslim Brotherhood figure. 
The security forces "are very stupid because they don't take gradual measures 
in their repression."But the group is facing a bigger challenge than state 
repression: loss of popular support. Last week, millions marched in demonstrations 
giving a mandate to charismatic military chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi 
  upon his request   to confront "terrorism" and potential 
violence.Losing public sympathy in Egypt, the Rabaah tent city is plastered 
with signs in English appealing to the outside world. A large banner 
reads: "No to military rule." Many tents bear signs that suggest the 
pro
 Iraqis inspect the site of a car bomb explosion in the impoverished 
district of Sadr City in Baghdad on July 29, 2013. Iraq violence 
kills 989 in July, the highest monthly since 2008, said the government 
on July 31, 2013.AFP/FileBAGHDAD (AFP)  Violence in Iraq killed 989 people 
in July, government figures released on Wednesday showed, making it the 
deadliest month since April 2008.The dead comprised 778 civilians, 88 police, 
55 soldiers and 68 insurgents, according to the figures compiled by the 
health, interior and defence ministries.Violence also wounded 1,567 people 
in July -- 1,356 civilians, 122 police and 89 soldiers.The figures make 
July the deadliest month since 2008, when Iraq was emerging from a 
bloody sectarian conflict.In April of that year, 1,428 people were killed, 
according to official figures -- 966 civilians, 69 police, 38 soldiers and 
355 insurgents.Iraq has faced years of attacks by militants, but analysts 
say widespread discontent among the Sunni Arab minority, which the government 
has failed to address, has fuelled this year's spike in unrest.Sunnis accuse 
the Shiite-led government of marginalising and targeting their community, 
including unwarranted arrests and terrorism charges.Protests that erupted 
in Sunni areas at the end of 2012 are still ongoing.In addition 
to major security problems, the government is also failing to provide adequate 
basic services such as electricity and clean water, and corruption is widespr
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