[41776] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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You can DVD your old 16mm and 8mm films and also your videos.

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (iMemories)
Wed May 6 11:07:40 2015

Date: Wed, 6 May 2015 08:07:34 -0700
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
From: "iMemories" <iMemories@leesent.work>

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DVD it.

http://www.leesent.work/l/lt5BR1081Y76NG/81F293YL584KB747LI1872083DS3231827404


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      <p><a href="http://www.leesent.work/unsUB1081NN76N/81X293NS584T747LR1872083WD3231827404" style="font-size:10px;"">Get out from our data here</a>
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          <span style="font-size: 9px ">109 E. 17th Suite 4552 - Cheyenne, WY 82001 </span> 
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        This is ad vertising;
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MEXICO CITY  The body of a U.S. teenager was found in 
the trunk of a burned-out car in western Mexico along with the 
bodies of two other youths, prosecutors said Tuesday.An employee of the state 
prosecutors' office in Michoacan state said the car holding the remains of 
the three young men was found on the side of a rural 
road on Christmas Eve. The young men had last been seen on 
the night of Dec. 23.The employee, who was not authorized to be 
quoted by name, identified the dead American as 18-year-old Alexis Uriel Marron.Prosecutors 
are looking into robbery as a possible motive because none of the 
men's possessions were found in the car. But the area has also 
been the scene of bloody turf battles between drug gangs. The Knights 
Templar and Jalisco New Generation cartels are believed to be active in 
the area.Marron was a student at Rolling Meadows High School in suburban 
Chicago and had relatives throughout the area. Marron's cousin, Danila Zendejas, told 
Chic

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authorities continued to resist the Arab League efforts.Activists said four soldiers were 
killed and 12 others wounded in the ambush Wednesday that targeted a 
joint military and security convoy and that was carried out by defectors 
in the southern province of Daraa.The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 
which reported the ambush, also said troops conducted raids and arrests in 
villages in the south, forcing residents who have been on strike for 
almost three weeks to open up their shops.The Local Coordination Committees also 
said the army stormed the village of Khirbet Ghazaleh with bulldozers to 
break the strike that lasted 18 days.The Observatory said two people died 
Wednesday in Homs, one by fire from security forces fire and the 
other from wounds sustained in shooting the day before.The team of about 
60 Arab League monitors arrived in Syria on Monday night -- the 
first foreign observers allowed in since March, when the uprising against Preside

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 up in the past months remain in jail.The Arab observers kicked 
off their one month mission in the violence-wracked country with a visit 
on Tuesday to Homs -- the first time Syria has allowed outside 
monitors to the city at the heart of the anti-government uprising.A local 
official in Homs told The Associated Press that four observers were in 
the city on Wednesday as well, touring various districts. He declined to 
give his details and spoke on condition of anonymity for security reasons.Syrian 
TV said observers toured several trouble spots in Homs including the neighborhoods 
of Bab Sbaa, Baba Amr, Inshaat and al-Muhajireen, adding they met with 
residents there.Homs residents said anti-government protesters were preparing for a second day 
of demonstrations, despite a massive security presence in the city."I can see 
riot police with shields and batons on main streets and intersections, they 
are everywhere," said one resident, speaking over the phone. He declined t

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Ariz., Officer Brad Jones was shot in August after a fight with 
a suspect being sought by a probation officer. And the two officers 
in South Dakota, James McCandless and Nick Armstrong, were killed in August 
after conducting what Rapid City authorities have said was a routine traffic 
stop.The glimmer of good news in the report was the falling number 
of traffic-related fatalities involving law enforcement officers, the lowest since 2005. Floyd 
said revamped policies adopted by some departments on police chases and a 
revived focus on road safety helped bring down the number of those 
deaths."It's perhaps the most preventable death for law enforcement," he said. "Better 
training and better awareness of the dangers of traffic safety will help 
to spare more police lives as we move forward."___Follow Bluestein at http://www.twitter.com/bluestein 
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ian civil aviation since the 1960s, with more than 800 planes built. 
It also has remained in service with many post-Soviet carriers.In recent years, 
Russia and other former Soviet nations have had some of the world's 
worst air traffic safety records. Experts blame poor maintenance of the aging 
aircraft, weak government controls, insufficient pilot training and a cost-cutting mentality.

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 sent to the blaze in Stamford likely will take it personally 
that they were unable to save the five family members."Their desire was 
to get that family out and they were unable to. Totally understandable 
   raging fire, people trapped inside. Sometimes the challenges are 
too big and it becomes personal at that point," he said."They feel 
this, they're going to feel this," he added. "It is our belief 
that every fire can be prevented and that no one should lose 
their life to fire. When that happens, we try to figure out 
why."Olshanski said the firefighters probably will feel a wide range of emotion. 
"There will be sadness, there will be grief," he said, adding how 
some might wonder if they could have done something more, or something 
different, to save the family.It is common for firefighters in these situations, 
Olshanski said, to go through a critical incident stress debriefing. He said 
it's important because they're going to have to go on similar calls 
in t


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