[42082] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Old 16mm and 8mm films and also your videos can be preserved on a DVD. Great!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (iMemories)
Sat May 9 10:09:11 2015
Date: Sat, 9 May 2015 07:09:10 -0700
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
From: "iMemories" <iMemories@proose.work>
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Do a DVD.
http://www.proose.work/l/lt5I1176HY76T/81VF293GK633I747A1872083AJ3231827436
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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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BUENOS AIRES, Argentina A group of 50 Argentine women threatened to
sue their plastic surgeons on Tuesday if they don't get free replacements
of faulty French breast implants.The group is led by attorney Virginia Luna,
who herself has the "PIP" silicone gel packs implanted in her breasts.
She said five of her clients have obtained out-of-court agreements to provide
free replacements, and if the rest don't get them as well, her
group will sue.The implants made by the now-defunct French company Poly Implant
Prothese were banned last year in countries around the world after more
than 1,000 women suffered ruptures. In all, 30,000 French women got the
implants, and could experience harmful leaks of cheap industrial-grade silicone -- not
the medical-grade gel that higher-quality implants use.France's health system has recommended that
any women with the implants get them replaced, and has agreed to
pay for surgeries that could total millions of dollars. Not so in
B
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actor and is believed to have placed the ashes in or outside
an entryway, near the trash.Flames quickly entered the house, spread throughout the
first floor and licked upstairs, trapping the girls, the grandparents, the mother
and the contractor, the city fire marshal said.That's when screams began to
wake neighborhood residents, soon followed by the whine of fire engines.As flames
shot from the home, owner Madonna Badger climbed out a window onto
scaffolding, screaming for her children and pointing to the third floor.Firefighters used
a ladder and construction scaffolding outside the house to reach the third
floor, but heat and poor visibility in a hallway turned them back,
said Brendan Keatley, a Stamford firefighter who was at the scene.The family
friend, Michael Borcina, told firefighters on the ground that he had taken
two girls to the second floor, but that they got separated because
of the heat. Firefighters then went to the second floor but again
were
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re courts.Rights groups have said some officers have explained the tests as
a way to clear their names of possible charges of abuse by
the protesters. Women protesters said they were threatened with prostitution charges before
they were subjected to the tests.Hossam Bahgat, a human rights activist who
was involved in the case, said the court ruling restores some justice
to the abused women and is a first step toward holding military
officials accountable."It is also very symbolically important because it is a crack
in the wall of impunity the (military rulers) have built around their
personnel and their conduct" against protesters and women in particular, he said.He
said the lawyers will try to upgrade the charges against the army
doctor to sexual assault instead of the current indecent act.Ibrahim, who covers
her hair in the style of conservative Muslims, told a private TV
station Monday that she filed the suits because she wanted to spare
others what she wen
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preme leader" of the party, state and army.Kim was somber in a
long, dark overcoat as he strode alongside his father's hearse accompanied by
top party officials behind him and key military leaders on the other
side of the limousine -- a lineup that was a good look
at who will be the core leadership in North Korea.North Korea now
turns to Thursday's memorial ceremony. Although there will be tributes to Kim
Jong Il, the country will be turning toward Kim Jong Un, analysts
said."The message will be clear: Kim Jong Un now leads the country
and there is no alternative," said Kim Yeon-su, a North Korea expert
at the state-run Korea National Defense University in South Korea.There will also
be more attention paid to the inner circle forming around Kim Jong
Un.On Wednesday, he was accompanied by Jang Song Thaek, Kim Jong Il's
brother-in-law and a vice chairman of the powerful National Defense Commission, who
is expected to be crucial in helping Kim Jong Un take power.
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Oppenheimer & Co.Although Iraq sits atop the world's fourth largest proven reserves
of conventional crude, decades of sanctions, war, sabotage and negligence have battered
the sector that generates about 95 percent of the government's foreign revenues.
Iraq hopes to boost its output to 12 million barrels per day
by 2017 from about 3 million a day now. Such a surge
will only be possible with help from foreign majors.Despite its oil resources,
electricity remains spotty, at best, years after Saddam's ouster and the country
faces chronic problems with unemployment and private sector growth largely because of
daily violence and rampant corruption.Western companies have so far been wary of
significant investments in a country where violence has recently spiked, and where
tensions are growing between Sunnis and Shiites.During the last two international licensing
rounds, Western majors expressed little appetite, and Baghdad signed contracts with a
host of state-run com
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ion in the Middle East as part of a global war on
terror, a conflict that is hard to define by conventional measures of
success."This is not a war on a particular place or a particular
force," he said.Bush himself illustrated the perils of celebrating milestones in the
war, Mrozek said, when he landed on an aircraft carrier and hailed
the end of major combat operations in Iraq behind a "Mission Accomplished"
banner in May 2003. U.S. troops remained in Iraq for 8 1/2
more years, and Bush was criticized over the banner.The benchmarks were clearer
in previous wars. After World War II, parades marked Japan's surrender. After
the Gulf War, celebrations marked the troops' return after Iraqi forces were
driven out of Kuwait.The only mass celebrations of U.S. military activities since
Sept. 11, 2001, were largely spontaneous: Large crowds gathered in Times Square
and outside the White House in April after Usama bin Laden was
killed.At the same time, Iraq veterans aren
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