[21340] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Do you need an extra outdoor light?
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Cordless Light Angel)
Sun Nov 10 07:34:55 2013
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From: "Cordless Light Angel" <CordlessLightAngel@oransviridus.us>
To: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
Date: Sun, 10 Nov 2013 04:34:52 -0800
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Cordless outdoor motion sensor light
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Justin Bieber accepts the award for favorite pop rock album for "Believe"
at the 40th American Music Awards in Los Angeles, California, November 18,
2012.ReutersCanadian singer Justin Bieber performs in a concert at the Atlantico
pavilion in Lisbon March 11, 2013.ReutersSwedish police say they have found
drugs on board a tour bus used by Justin Bieber.Police spokesman Lars
Bystrom says a small amount of drugs and a stun gun were
found when officers raided the empty bus parked under the Globen concert
venue in Stockholm, where Bieber was performing Wednesday.Bystrom said Thursday
they have no suspects and no one has been arrested. He declined
to identify the drug, saying it had been sent to a laboratory
for an analysis.He says police acted after smelling marijuana coming from
inside the bus when it was parked outside the hotel where Bieber
was staying. The drug squad was alerted and searched the bus during
the concert.But a source close to Bieber denied the claims made by
the police."The cops found nothing and left. No violations. Nothing," the
source told FOX 411.On Thursday morning, the 19-year-old singer tweeted:
"some of the rumors about me....where do people even get this stuff.
whatever...back to the music."Bieber is in Stockholm as part of a world
tour.The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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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<strong><center><a href="http://www.oransviridus.us/2989/174/380/1405/2938.10tt65731829AAF1.php"><H3>Cordless outdoor motion sensor light</a></H3></strong>
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<a href="http://www.oransviridus.us/2989/174/380/1405/2938.10tt65731829AAF2.php">Light Angel — The Motion Activated Stick Up LED Light</a>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">fired for mistreating his players and mocking them with gay slurs.If two
women dance together at a club or walk arm-in-arm down the street,
people are usually less likely to question it though
some wonder if that has more to do with a lack of
awareness than acceptance."Lesbians are so invisible in our society. And
so I think the hatred is more invisible," says Laura Grimes, a
licensed clinical social worker in Chicago whose counseling practice caters
to gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender clients.Grimes says she also frequently
hears from lesbians who are harassed for "looking like dykes," meaning that
people are less accepting if they look more masculine.Still, Ian O'Brien,
a gay man in Washington, D.C., sees more room for women "to
transcend what femininity looks like, or at least negotiate that space a
little bit more."O'Brien, who's 23, recently wrote an opinion piece tied
to the Boy Scout debate and his own experience in the Scouts
when he was growing up in the San Diego area."To put it
simply: Being a boy is supposed to look one way, and you
get punished when it doesn't," O'Brien wrote in the piece, which appeared
in The Advocate, a national magazine for the gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender communities.Joey Carrillo, a gay student at Elmhurst College
in suburban Chicago, remembers trying to be as masculine as possible in
high school. He hid the fact that he was gay, particularly around
other athletes. As a wrestler,
Kalli Atteya, 45, smiles while recounting the daring rescue of her 12-year-old
son, Niko, who was allegedly kidnapped in Egypt in 2011 by her
former husband, Mohamed Atteya. (Joshua Rhett Miller/FoxNews.com)Khalil
Mohamed "Niko" Atteya, 12, told FoxNews.com he now hopes to be home-schooled
as he reintegrates into the United States after roughly 20 months in
Egypt. (Courtesy: Kalli Atteya)Mohamed Atteya holds his son shortly after
his July 2000 birth in Pennsylvania. Atteya's ex-wife said he abandoned
the family some three months later. (Courtesy: Kalli Atteya)Kalli and Mohamed
Atteya in an undated photograph. "My biggest concern is that he will
find us somehow and try to take [Niko] back by force," she
told FoxNews.com. (Courtesy: Kalli Atteya)Through the slit of the burqa
she wore to blend in on the streets of Alexandria, Egypt, Kalli
Atteya waited and watched until the boy climbed off the school bus.
When she saw him, she moved quickly, grabbing his arm and steering
him toward the waiting motorized cart."Get in," she said to the 12-year-old,
who recognized his mother's piercing blue eyes and obeyed wordlessly.Soon,
they were speeding toward a safehouse where they would wait for three
weeks before returning to the U.S., and ending a 20-month ordeal that
began with another abduction one the boy, Khalil Mohamed Niko Atteya,
did not accept willingly. His father, Mohamed Atteya, who is wanted by
the U.S. authorities, is accused of luring
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