[13852] in linux-announce channel archive
Regrow Your Hair.
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (RestoreLostHair)
Sat Jun 27 16:49:32 2015
Date: Sat, 27 Jun 2015 13:49:30 -0700
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
From: "RestoreLostHair" <RestoreLostHair@fabten.work>
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Get it back.
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<span style="font-size: 9px ">109 E. 17th Suite 4552 - Cheyenne, WY 82001 </span>
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as partners in the research," said Selby. Findings will be presented
in clear language -- a kind of Consumer Reports approach -- so
that patients and doctors can easily draw on them to make decisions."Our
goal, our hope, is that over time, by involving patients in research,
two things will happen," said Selby. "One is that we will start
asking questions in a more practical fashion, so the results would speak
more consistently to questions that patients want to know the answers to.
And two is that, by our example of involving patients in the
research, trust will rise." He expects to unveil the institute's proposed research
agenda in the next few weeks.Former Medicare administrator Gail Wilensky says that
agenda should focus on high-cost procedures and drugs on which the medical
community has not developed a consensus, and which have widely different patterns
of use around the country. A Republican, Wilensky believes opposition to the
institute's work is shorts
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ng his coffin passed. Some struggled to get past police holding back
the crowd."How can the sky not cry?" a weeping soldier standing in
the snow said to state TV. "The people ... are all crying
tears of blood."The dramatic scenes of grief showed how effectively North Korea
built a personality cult around Kim Jong Il despite chronic food shortages
and decades of economic hardship.A large challenge for North Korea's propaganda apparatus
will be "to counter the public's perception that the new leader is
a spoiled child of privilege," said Brian Myers, an expert on North
Korean propaganda at Dongseo University in Busan, South Korea."Having Kim Jong Un
trudge mournfully next to the hearse in terrible weather was a very
clever move," Myers said.Even as North Koreans mourned the loss of the
second leader the nation has known, the transition of power to Kim
Jong Un was well under way. The young man, who is in
late 20s, is already being hailed by state media as the "su
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ators also say the Argentine government should cover the costs."It would be
a good move if the State opens a clinic in one of
the city's public hospitals to attend to women with these implants, analyze
each case and later extract them at no cost," Deputy Daniel Amoroso
said in a statement. He said about 28,000 women get breast implants
each year in Argentina.In both Argentina and Brazil, government officials also asked
doctors to notify federal agencies of any patient complaints.It would be premature
to have women remove the implants if they're not having any problems,
said the president of Brazil's Plastic Surgeons Association, Jose Horacio Aboudib."I'd remove
them from any patient that wants to, but I don't see the
need for everyone to go into surgery," he said.Aboudib added that the
Brazil surgeons' association in January will create a national registry of breast
implants, where doctors would enter information about the patient, the date of
the operation, a
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y sites and urged the observers to insist on full access to
all sites used for detention.HRW's report, issued late Tuesday, echoes charges made
by Syrian opposition members that thousands of detainees were being transferred to
military sites ahead of the observers' visit.Syrian officials have said the Arab
League monitors will have unrestricted access to trouble spots but will not
be allowed to visit sensitive military sites."Syria has shown it will stop
at nothing to undermine independent monitoring of its crackdown," said Sarah Leah
Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. She said it was
essential for the Arab League "to draw clear lines" regarding access to
detainees, and be willing to speak out when those lines are crossed.SANA
said the prisoners released Wednesday did not include those with "blood on
their hands."Last month, Syrian authorities released 2,645 prisoners in three batches but
activists and critics say thousands more who were picked
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MEXICO CITY The body of a U.S. teenager was found in
the trunk of a burned-out car in western Mexico along with the
bodies of two other youths, prosecutors said Tuesday.An employee of the state
prosecutors' office in Michoacan state said the car holding the remains of
the three young men was found on the side of a rural
road on Christmas Eve. The young men had last been seen on
the night of Dec. 23.The employee, who was not authorized to be
quoted by name, identified the dead American as 18-year-old Alexis Uriel Marron.Prosecutors
are looking into robbery as a possible motive because none of the
men's possessions were found in the car. But the area has also
been the scene of bloody turf battles between drug gangs. The Knights
Templar and Jalisco New Generation cartels are believed to be active in
the area.Marron was a student at Rolling Meadows High School in suburban
Chicago and had relatives throughout the area. Marron's cousin, Danila Zendejas, told
Chic
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y arms-length insurance companies are hardly passive."And if its not passive, lawmakers
contend, the income is taxable.AARP did not make anyone available for an
interview, but did send a letter to Fox News from Kevin Donnellan,
AARP executive vice president and chief communications officer, who wrote that AARPs
chief aim is upholding its standards, and its actions are a detailed
commitment to quality control on products offered in its name."We have spent
more than five decades proving our commitment to helping older Americans obtain
quality, affordable health so, of course, we take seriously how others use
our name," Donnellan wrote. We are disappointed that this work should be
the subject of congressional criticism.AARP makes the majority of its revenues from
United's supplemental insurance policies to seniors, including what is known as Medigap,
which covers things for which Medicare does not pay. One of AARP's
many ads tells seniors that the insurance can hel
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