[41175] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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Get 20/20 vision today

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Dr. Williams)
Thu Apr 30 01:01:28 2015

To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
Date: Wed, 29 Apr 2015 22:01:23 -0700
From: "Dr. Williams" <Dr.Williams@wattvalley.com>

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Get 20/20 vision today

http://www.wattvalley.com/l/lt14W1480L56ON/81U125D391W17BS22529568T758805847

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<center><strong><a href="http://www.wattvalley.com/l/lt10L1480K56SS/81I125L391P17MS22529568Y758805847">Get 20/20 vision today </a></strong><center><br><a href="http://www.wattvalley.com/l/lt10M1480W56TC/81O125A391H17IX22529568P758805847"><img src="http://www.wattvalley.com/im/L1480G56QN/81B125O391BH17FP22529568G758805847/img05681236.jpg" border="0"></a><br>

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<font color="white" size="1">d Elbergwa, speaking in fluent English. "We lived by it. Somehow we 
accepted it for a long time."When the uprising began in February, she 
said, her two brothers joined the fight and her father began driving 
an ambulance. She was heartbroken at first, seeing the broadcast images of 
suffering and mayhem, but then she joined anti-Qaddafi protests on campus.Gibril also 
was torn. "I don't like seeing people being killed, but I was 
happy to see what he represented die," said Gibril, who has worked 
in the human rights field. "I wanted him to face justice."About 20 
students in the program, including those loyal to the Qaddafi regime, decided 
to return home when NATO forces began attacking government targets, but the 
others stayed on.Hamza El-Najah, 28, another student in the program, said it's 
not clear now when stability will come to the nation."As the world 
knows, they don't have freedom for more than 42 years," said El-Najah, 
whose family owns a jewelry store in a 
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<font color="white" size="1"> Libya later next year, the U.S. could consider granting asylum."The perception 
is just because these folks received the scholarship from the Qaddafi family 
they are somehow aligned ... with the Qaddafi family," said Eugenia Zacks-Carney, 
an immigration attorney who has been working with the Libyans at Michigan 
State. "Nothing could be further from the truth."Michigan State launched the program 
in 2010 under a contract with Libya's National Economic Development Board to 
provide training in English, political science and international relations for future foreign 
service officials. Elbergwa, who describes her family as middle-class, was working toward 
a master's degree in international relations in Benghazi when she entered the 
program.She said that for those interested in public service in Libya, there 
was no alternative to dealing with the Qaddafi regime."Everything in the country 
was controlled by their family. ... We liked to call Libya `Qaddafi's 
farm,"' sai
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