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Can you believe what I found on her record?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Instant Check Mate)
Fri Aug 2 03:09:53 2013

Date: Fri, 2 Aug 2013 00:09:52 -0700
From: "Instant Check Mate" <InstantCheckMate@hedanzmtc.info>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu

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Is your arrest record public?


http://www.hedanzmtc.info/1734/5/45/16/77.11tt71675797AAF15.php

No Thanks - http://www.hedanzmtc.info/1734/5/45/16/77.11tt71675797AAF9.html

















 "intentional 
or bad-faith violations" were found. The document said only that the missteps 
resulted in the "automated tools operating in a manner that was not 
completely consistent with the specific terms of the court's order." Additional 
safeguards were subsequently ordered by the surveillance court.Intelligence 
officials stressed at a Senate committee hearing on Wednesday that the program 
still does not let them look at content unless there is a 
reasonable suspicion that the material might be related to terror groups.Some 
lawmakers have come down hard on the NSA over these programs, pushing 
to force the agency to release more information and potentially rein in 
the program itself.One of the documents, though, adamantly defended the 
rationale for collecting massive quantities of "metadata" on phone calls 
-- like the date, time and duration of calls."The more metadata NSA 
has access to, the more likely it is that NSA can identify 
or discover the network of contacts linked to targeted numbers or addresses," 
the document says.Declassified order on phone data collection
 Giuseppe "Joe" Giudice, 43, left, and his wife, Teresa Giudice, 41, of 
Montville Township, N.J., walk out of Martin Luther King, Jr. Courthouse 
after a court appearance, Tuesday, July 30, 2013, in Newark, N.J.APThis 
Sept. 13, 2009 file photo originally released by Oral-B Pulsonic shows "Real 
Housewives of New Jersey" stars, Teresa Giudice, left, and her husband Joe 
Giudice at the Caravan Fashion Show in New York. Teresa and Giuseppe 
Joe Giudice were charged in a 39-count indictment handed up Monday, July 
29, 2013, in Newark, N.J.APJoe Gorga, left, Teresa Giudice, center, and 
Jacqueline Laurita.BravoTeresa Giudice and husband Giuseppe Joe Giudice 
may not be the only ones losing sleep over their latest trouble 
with the law: their costars on Bravos Real Housewives of New Jersey 
and the network itself could get wrapped up in their legal woes.Because 
Bravo is an entertainment network -- and not a news agency -- 
it likely does not maintain any First Amendment privileges, meaning execs 
and personalities from the network may be called to court, New Jersey-based 
attorney Darren Del Sardo told FOX411s Pop Tarts column.Employees filming 
for Bravo can certainly be called as witnesses to establish that the 
Giudices were perhaps making large purchases in cash during the time of 
the bankruptcy, he explained. The network could also be called as a 
witness to support an increase of anticipated income paid by Bravo to 
Teresa that was not disclosed in her 

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">  told FoxNews.com. (The stem 
cells) can repair tissue damage caused by chemo radiotherapy, so those patients 
will tolerate chemotherapy much better. It gives enough room for clinicians 
to use a high dose of chemotherapy to kill cancer  and 
the patient can survive.Through a series of in vitro experiments, Geng and 
his team analyzed cells in the GI tract, stumbling upon an important 
molecule called ROBO1. They found that ROBO1 was specifically expressed 
in intestinal stem cells  but not in any other cells in 
the body. Upon this discovery, the researchers added to the cells a 
protein called SLIT2, which binds to ROBO1.The result: stem cell regeneration.Basically, 
you add SLIT2, you have more intestinal stem cells, Geng explained. If 
you have more intestinal stem cells, you repair more tissue damage, just 
like in general cell replication. So the ability to repair damage is 
higher  its just the logical explanation.The researchers theorized that 
by increasing stem cells in the gut, the intestine and GI tract 
are better protected from the effects of chemotherapy, allowing cancer patients 
to ingest nutrients and perform critical functions without releasing intestinal 
toxins into the blood circulation.To test this idea, Geng experimented with 
hundreds of mice with late-stage, metastatic cancer. All of the mice received 
a lethal dose of chemotherapy, but only half were given SLIT2 or 
an analogous protein called R-SPONDIN1 to stimulate intestinal 
 Tenn.Days earlier, Obama accused the House 
GOP of risking another financial crisis by issuing ultimatums over the debt 
ceiling and government funding."We've seen a group of Republicans in the 
House, in particular, who suggest they wouldn't vote to pay the very 
bills that Congress has already racked up," Obama said. "That's not an 
economic plan. That's just being a deadbeat."Obama has reason to be cautiously 
optimistic about the Senate, which passed a far-reaching immigration overhaul 
Obama sorely sought with bipartisan support and struck a deal over Obama's 
nominees that has led to a flurry of confirmations after months of 
logjam. A number of prominent GOP senators have also criticized a Republican 
plan to threaten a government shutdown unless funding is cut off for 
Obama's health care law.But even in the Senate, there's skepticism about 
Obama's intentions. Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., said Obama's contrasting 
tone about the House and Senate amounts to a divide-and-conquer strategy 
that calls into question the White House's outreach."These discussions have 
been going on for five years and no agreements have been reached 
yet," Sessions said. "It could be the president is playing the Senate 
like a fiddle."On most issues -- including pressing tax and spending matters 
-- Senate and House Republicans are unified in their opposition. There was 
no telling Republicans apart Tuesday, for instance, as they panned a corporate 
tax cut and jobs spend
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