[44234] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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Your teeth can be white again. (No trays!) Few Days.

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (BestWhite Smile)
Thu Jun 4 11:19:39 2015

Date: Thu, 4 Jun 2015 08:19:37 -0700
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
From: "BestWhite Smile" <BestWhiteSmile@hassile.work>

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Few days.

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 against possible allegations of rape, indicating it was an administrative order 
and not an individual decision.Because the military is also acting as a 
police force, "it is the duty of the armed forces when carrying 
out these duties to abide by the law and not violate its 
provisions when dealing with citizens," the court ruling said.The ruling "is incredibly 
important not only because it comes after scenes of sexual assault and 
battery of women by military troops," said Heba Morayef, an Egypt researcher 
with Human Rights Watch. "It is also important because it is the 
first time a civilian court acknowledged and criticized abuse by the military."At 
first the military denied administering virginity tests. Then last week, the military 
prosecutor said one army doctor is on trial for abuse. On Tuesday, 
after the court decision, military prosecutor Adel el-Morsi said the tests are 
not condoned by the military, calling the abuse "an individual behavior" that 
is befo

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PHOENIX  Some people in Phoenix are threatening to pull their support 
for the Humane Society after it euthanized a cat brought in for 
medical treatment by a former heroin addict.The Arizona Republic reports (http://bit.ly/tNzWqN ) 
that Daniel Dockery's 9-month-old cat, Scruffy, was put down not because of 
its wounds but because the 49-year-old Phoenix man couldn't immediately pay for 
its care.Dockery had been searching for Scruffy since taking it to the 
Humane Society three weeks ago and learned of Scruffy's fate on Tuesday. 
He says he's devastated.A Humane Society spokeswoman says the agency took Scruffy 
intending to treat it and put it in foster care, but when 
he was taken to a second-chance clinic with three other cats, doctors 
were only available to treat two of them.

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el chain CEO heading a national effort to promote foreign travel to 
the U.S.At the same time, he said, the U.S. needs "to be 
more cognizant of the importance of every single traveler."Tourism leaders said the 
decline in foreign visitors over the past decade is costing American businesses 
and workers $859 billion in untapped revenue and at least half a 
million potential jobs at a time when the slowly recovering economy needs 
both.While the State Department has beefed up tourist services in recent years, 
reducing wait times significantly for would-be visitors will likely be a challenge 
as officials try to balance terrorist threats and illegal immigration with tight 
budgets that limit hiring."Security is job one for us," said Edward Ramotowski, 
managing director of the department's visa services. "The reason we have a 
visa system is to enforce the immigration laws of the United States."Anti-immigration 
proponents argue travel to the U.S. is already too accessible a

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MONTERREY, Mexico  Police in the northern Mexico state of Nuevo Leon 
said Tuesday that information provided by arrested members of a kidnapping gang 
has led them to at least seven bodies found buried in shallow 
graves or dumped in a well.By nightfall, Nuevo Leon state police had 
found seven sets of human remains around the cities of Linares and 
Montemorelos, near the border with Tamaulipas state. Four bodies were found burned 
or half-buried, and three others had apparently been thrown down a well.A 
Nuevo Leon state detective who was not authorized to be quoted by 
name said information from a band of five kidnappers detained over the 
weekend by soldiers led police to the bodies.The soldiers detained the gang 
after a woman's relatives alerted a passing army patrol that she was 
being kidnapped.Nuevo Leon security spokesman Jorge Domene said the gang worked for 
the Zetas drug cartel.Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon have been the scene of 
bloody turf battles between the Z

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APJoe Perry and Steven Tyler of Aerosmith.Aerosmith front man Steven Tyler got 
engaged to his long term girlfriend Erin Brady over the Christmas holidays, 
TMZ reported.Brady, 38, was spotted wearing a large diamond ring, which sources 
say was an engagement ring, as the couple spent Christmas Day on 
the Hawaiian island of Maui.It is not clear whether the "American Idol" 
judge proposed before or after their Christmas vacation, but Tyler's family are 
reportedly furious about the news as they do not like Brady, according 
to the gossip site.Some of the rocker's relatives are allegedly upset that 
the 63-year-old singer did not tell them he planned to pop the 
question until after the proposal.Several members of the Tyler family have apparently 
clashed with Brady in the past, with one source telling TMZ, "She's 
just been mean to the family."Tyler, who has been married twice before, 
has yet to comment.

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nd he adds, "Recent estimates indicate that veterans comprise about one quarter 
of the total adult homeless population."A new foundation would not replace the 
many existing organizations that already offer help to veterans. Rather, it would 
create a kind of clearinghouse of information to make it easier for 
veterans to find help that already exists."Without this type of collaboration," Bennet 
says, "in some communities, veterans can fall through the cracks in the 
systems that support them."Bennet says a working model for the foundation already 
exists in Colorado Springs, a city home to five major military installations. 
Retired Air Force Major Gen. G. Wesley Clark (not to be confused 
with retired U.S. Army General Wesley K. Clark who ran for President 
in 2004) says the Colorado Springs region is a community that understands 
the needs of America's veterans."Well I think it's important to understand up 
front that in the United States approximately only 1 percent (

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