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No more pills or capsules to swallow

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Slim Spray)
Fri Apr 4 21:04:27 2014

Date: Fri, 4 Apr 2014 18:04:24 -0700
From: "Slim Spray" <SlimSpray@hassiscomgk.us>
Envelope-to: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu

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Spray your way to better health

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ell as the possibility that Korman's ruling 
might take effect and lift age restrictions altogether."This decision undermines 
the right of parents to make important health decisions for their young 
daughters," said Anna Higgins of the Family Research Council.Obama aides 
bristled at the suggestion that the FDA decision was an attempt at 
political compromise, insisting the FDA merely responded to an application 
filed by Plan B's manufacturer. At the same time, however, White House 
spokesman Jay Carney said Obama's concern had been about girls younger than 
15 having access, suggesting an age limit of 15 might be acceptable.If 
a woman already is pregnant, the morning-after pill has no effect. It 
prevents ovulation or fertilization of an egg. According to the medical 
definition, pregnancy doesn't begin until a fertilized egg implants itself 
into the wall of the uterus. Still, some critics say Plan B 
is the equivalent of an abortion pill because it may also be 
able to prevent a fertilized egg from attaching to the uterus, a 
contention that many scientists -- and Korman, in his ruling -- said 
has been discredited.
he government estimates 
are correct, that leaves billions of barrels of oil and trillions more 
cubic feet of natural gas left for the taking.Thats good news for 
North Dakota -- a state thats already reaped big benefits from the 
oil boom and has one of the strongest state economies in the 
country coupled with an exceptionally low unemployment rate. Tax revenues 
from natural gas and oil hit $1 billion last year in North 
Dakota and the state is on track to double that number next 
year. Republican Sen. John Hoeven believes numbers from the new USGS survey 
will draw even more developers to the area.This will mean a lot 
of jobs, he told FoxNews.com. Financially we are already very strong, we 
have no debt, but this will mean a lot more. Stores, restaurants, 
movie theaters  well have to build and well have to hire 
workers.The competition to court employees is already on at the McDonalds 
in Dickinson, N.D. where prospective hires are being lured in with $300 
signing bonuses, Hoeven said.Calls to McDonalds Corp. for comment were not 
immediately returned. Some environmental experts like John Harju, associate 
director for research with the Energy and Environmental Research Center 
at the University of North Dakota, believe the possibilities are even greater 
than what the government forecasts.Like any of these USGS estimates, think 
of them as a milemarker thats well behind you in the rearview 
mirror, he told the Grand Forks Herald in North Dakota.S

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">rowing costs   as long as they first ask 
for help from the eurozone's bailout fund.The purchases would lower borrowing 
costs because they would drive up bond prices up and interest yields 
down, since prices and yields move in opposite directions. Governments could 
then take advantage of those lower yields when they sell bonds to 
pay off old bonds that are coming due.The ECB has actually bought 
no bonds under the offer. The mere fact that the offer exists, 
however, affected the bond market and lowered borrowing costs for countries 
such as Spain and Italy.CHEAP LOANS TO BANKS: The ECB made an 
unlimited amount of cheap, three-year loans available to banks on two occasions. 
In December 2011, 523 banks borrowed 489 billion euros ($608.17 billion) 
and 800 banks borrowed 530 billion in a second operation in February 
2012.The long duration of the loans gave banks security that they would 
have the money they needed through 2015.  It eliminated market fears 
that one or more banks might collapse and thus made it easier 
for banks to borrow money and function in support of the wider 
economy.Some of the money is now being repaid by banks under a 
provision that lets them give the money back after a year.EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE: 
The ECB is allowing national central banks in troubled countries to make 
emergency loans to banks that are not eligible to borrow from the 
ECB's programs. That is because those banks don't have enough safe collateral 
such as hig
 March 8, 2012: Florida Gov. Rick Scott delivers his state of the 
state speech to the Florida legislature in Tallahassee.APTALLAHASSEE, Fla. 
 Gov. Rick Scott vetoed a bill late Wednesday that would have 
ended permanent alimony in Florida.Scott vetoed the measure (SB 718) just 
four hours before the midnight deadline to approve or veto it. The 
bill automatically would have become law if Scott had done nothing by 
then.If it had become law, Florida would have become the fifth state 
to abolish permanent alimony.In a letter to Senate President Don Gaetz, 
Scott commended bill sponsors Ritch Workman in the House and Kelli Stargel 
in the Senate -- both Republicans -- and said there are "several 
forward looking elements of this bill."But alimony "represents an important 
remedy for our judiciary to use in providing support to families as 
they adjust to changes in life circumstances," Scott wrote. "As a husband, 
father and grandfather, I understand the vital importance of family."Scott 
could not "support this legislation because it applies retroactively and 
thus tampers with the settled economic expectations of many Floridians who 
have experienced divorce," he wrote. "The retroactive adjustment of alimony 
could result in unfair, unanticipated results."Florida law "already provides 
for the adjustment of alimony under the proper circumstances," Scott wrote. 
"The law also ensures that spouses who have sacrificed their careers to 
raise a family do not s
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