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Loose Up To 8 Ponds a Week Without Dieting! Boost Up Your Metabolism with Pure Garcinia Extract!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Pure Garcinia Cambogia)
Sun Oct 6 11:05:09 2013

To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Sun, 6 Oct 2013 08:05:07 -0700
From: "Pure Garcinia Cambogia" <PureGarciniaCambogia@riiagcmcerine.us>

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100% Organic Weight Loss!


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 e younger Bush.People 
are perhaps beginning to appreciate that President Bush, for all his Texas 
swagger, is a gentleman, Fox News senior political analyst Brit Hume said.I 
wish that some of my fellow scholars, particularly historians and law professors 
and political scientists, would do what academics are supposed to do, which 
is to bide their time, do the actual research before proclaiming a 
presidency a failure, said Stephen Knott, a U.S. Naval War College professor 
and author of a book about Bush. He described the Bush legacy 
as "unfinished."It takes a long time for documents, for oral history interviews, 
particularly classified documents, to emerge," Knott said. "And then you 
get a fuller, more complete picture of a presidency.Presidential historian 
Douglas Brinkley said he wasn't surprised by Bush's rising approval rating.We 
pummel presidents when theyre in the White House," said Brinkley, whose 
2007 book "The Great Deluge" was critical of Bush's handling of the 
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. "We give them a hard time. Then they 
leave and they write a memoir that becomes an instant bestseller. Journalists 
ask softball questions, and then they open up a presidential library. And 
people forgive a lot of the mistakes and say, Hey, he brought 
our country through some tough times.'"The toughest time for Americans during 
Bush's presidency was Sept. 11, 2001, when Al Qaeda hijacked and crashed 
four airplanes, killing nearly 3,000 Americ
 The U.S. and South Korea are extending for two years their current 
civilian nuclear agreement and postponing a contentious decision on whether 
Seoul will be allowed to reprocess spent fuel as it seeks to 
expand its atomic energy industry.Wednesday's announcement is a setback 
to South Korea's new leader, Park Geun-hye, who had made revision of 
the 39-year-old treaty one of her top election pledges, but it alleviates 
a potential disagreement between the allies when Park visits Washington 
in two weeks to meet with President Obama.State Department spokesman Patrick 
Ventrell said the extension will provide more time for the two governments 
to complete the complex negotiations on a successor agreement that will 
recommence in June."These are very technical talks, and both parties felt 
that we needed more time," he told reporters.South Korea is the world's 
fifth-largest nuclear energy producer and is planning to expand domestic 
use of nuclear power and exports of nuclear reactors. But its radioactive 
waste storage is filling up, so it wants to be able to 
reprocess spent plutonium. It also wants to be able enrich uranium, a 
process that uranium must undergo to become a viable nuclear fuel. Currently, 
South Korea has to get countries such as the U.S. and France 
to do enrichment for it.Revising the agreement is a sensitive matter as 
the same technologies can also be used to develop nuclear weapons. Washington 
has historically opposed allowing repr

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> When he left the White House in January 2009 after two tumultuous 
terms, President George W. Bush -- the only man to attain the 
presidency by virtue of a Supreme Court ruling and only the second 
son of a president to also serve as president -- was nursing 
an approval rating around 30 percent.Four years later, however, public opinion 
has turned slowly but steadily in the former presidents direction. A nationwide 
Fox News poll conducted earlier this week now finds registered voters evenly 
split in their assessments of the 43rd president -- a verdict roughly 
equal to the esteem in which they hold his successor, President Obama.As 
Bush prepares to attend the dedication of his presidential library in Dallas, 
Texas, on Thursday, his increasing approval generally mirrors the trend 
for other former presidents, but Bush's turnaround is remarkable, given 
how low the numbers were when he left office. At his lowest, 
amid the dark days of the financial collapse in October 2008, only 
23 percent rated Bush positively.Throughout President Obamas first term 
-- when the incumbent relentlessly blamed his predecessor for the state 
of the economy and a host of national security problems -- Bush, 
aside from promoting his 2010 memoir and giving a small number of 
paid speeches, mostly remained silent. This was in keeping with the practice 
of his father, George H.W. Bush, of never criticizing his successor, and 
it may partially explain the rise in esteem for th
 d others that Russian officials contacted the U.S. government 
at least twice in 2011 with concerns about Tsarnaev, the Chechen who 
two years later would carry out last week's deadly bombing of the 
Boston Marathon, as an example of an instance that merits further investigation."In 
a string of apparent intelligence-sharing lapses, Tamerlan Tsarnaev was 
able to slip through the cracks and carry out this devastating attack," 
the senators said.Authorities suspect Tsarnaev, 26, and his younger brother, 
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, of using improvised explosives to kill and maim runners 
and spectators near the finish line of the Boston Marathon. Three people 
were killed and more than 200 injured in the April 15 attack.Tamerlan 
Tsarnaev was killed days later in a shootout with police. His 19-year-old 
brother escaped but was captured alive Friday night and now faces a 
charge of use of a weapon of mass destruction that could carry 
the death penalty.The brothers immigrated to the United States about a decade 
ago with their family. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev became a U.S. citizen last year, 
but Tamerlan had not yet earned citizenship.Senators, after being briefed 
on the case Tuesday, said the U.S. government had "multiple contacts" with 
Russia about the older Boston bombing suspect, but those lawmakers wouldn't 
offer any more details.Fox News was told the FBI tried to determine 
if Tsarnaev had any ties to terrorism, but those efforts apparently proved 
inconclusive."W
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