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- xwxw posted on 12/15/2004
- zt posted on 07/15/2009China Unrest Tied To Labor Program Uighurs Sent to Work in Other Regions By Ariana Eunjung Cha Washington Post Foreign Service Wednesday, July 15, 2009 URUMQI, China -- When the local government began recruiting young Muslim Uighurs in this far western region for jobs at the Xuri Toy Factory in the country's booming coastal region, the response was mixed. Some, lured by the eye-popping salaries and benefits, eagerly signed up. But others, like Safyden's 21-year-old sister, were wary.
- touchetouche posted on 07/14/2009Why the #$%! Do We Swear? For Pain Relief Dropping the F-bomb or other expletives may not only be an expression of agony, but also a means to alleviate it By Frederik Joelving Bad language could be good for you, a new study shows. For the first time, psychologists have found that swearing may serve an important function in relieving pain. The study, published today in the journal NeuroReport, measured how long college students could keep their hands immersed in cold water. During the chilly exerc
- maya posted on 07/11/2009
- fanghuzhaifanghuzhai posted on 07/15/2009
- liaokangƽ posted on 07/12/2009
- зз posted on 07/14/2009
- mayaJessica posted on 07/14/2009
- xwxw posted on 07/12/2009
- xw posted on 07/09/2009
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- JulyJuly posted on 07/13/2009
- mayaС posted on 04/25/2005
- July posted on 07/13/2009
- July posted on 07/13/2009Astronomers notebooks indicate he may have noticed planet in 1613 By Robert Roy Britt Editorial director updated 3:55 p.m. CT, Thurs., July 9, 2009 History books tell us that the planet Neptune was found in the mid-1800s after years of speculation and search. But in 1613, more than two centuries before Neptune was officially discovered, Galileo Galilei knew he had found it, according to a new theory by University of Melbourne physicist David Jamieson. Jamieson has been studying Galileo'
- xw posted on 07/12/2009
- Wu_Ming posted on 07/12/2009
- maya posted on 07/12/2009
- touche posted on 07/12/2009Music In and Out of Harmony With Nazi Ideals By Kirsten Grieshaber Associated Press Sunday, July 12, 2009 EISENACH, Germany -- Richard Wagner is the classical composer most associated with the Nazis, but Johann Sebastian Bach was the one the party dubbed "the most German of Germans" and whose music was played at rallies to stir up nationalist zeal. The Nazis praised Bach for his "racially pure" family tree dating to the 11th century and for the "German" discipline of his baroque-style
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