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DATE | 2013-03-29 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] The NY Times and Egyptian Gold easy to find now
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Great News week.
N Korea threatens to unfurl their rockets at us and the NY Times as a front page dedicated to the Supreme Court and Gay Marriage ruling. It is so warped....
The Times actually printed about "White Girls" and "Black Girls" and the HPV Vaccine a few days ago. I was in shock.
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/25/a-push-for-hpv-vaccinations/
"Just 48 percent of white teenage girls had received the first dose of the vaccine, compared with 56 percent of blacks and 65 percent of Hispanics, according to the C.D.C. But the rate fell steeply by the third dose. In all, 42 percent of Hispanic teenage girls had been fully vaccinated. About a third of whites had received all three doses, similar to the share of black girls.
That breakdown turns the typical pattern of whites having better health outcomes on its head. ?I can't remember a vaccine where I saw a pattern like this,?said Dr. Walter A. Orenstein, director of Emory University? Program for Vaccine Policy and Development, who ran the C.D.C. immunization program for 16 years."
The new editor of the Times seems to be a senior of Wingate HS, or the same girl who edited my High School Year Book in 1980.
Anyway - want Free Gold from Egypt? This is really a serious problem.
Read this
Egypt revolution brings golden age for tomb raiders
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-21960373
Egypt's revolution has not only brought political upheaval, but also lucrative opportunities for illegal diggers hunting for antique treasures and gold.
There is ample anecdotal testimony from people living near the Great Pyramids at Giza that since the revolution large holes have been appearing in the ground there.
Our own inspection quickly revealed evidence of what they were talking about.
Close to a desert track, just beyond a small outcrop of sandstone and with the pyramids looming in the distance, we found a large, evenly dug vertical shaft.
It was at least a metre and a half in diameter and we could not see the bottom of it. Dropping a rock into it and waiting for the sound suggested it was deep.
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