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Brain Doctors Hate Him...

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Cognizine)
Wed Nov 6 11:34:24 2013

From: "Cognizine" <Cognizine@pubbollpaiker.us>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Wed, 6 Nov 2013 08:34:13 -0800

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NASA Doctor Reveals How To Reverse Brain Age

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FILE - In this Tuesday, Feb. 8, 2011 file photo, the Egyptian 
President Hosni Mubarak sits during his meeting with Emirates foreign minister, 
not pictured, at the Presidential palace in Cairo, Egypt. Egypts state news 
agency says the countrys top prosecutor has ordered ousted President Hosni 
Mubarak be detained for 15 days pending investigation into a new case 
of corruption by him and his family for pocketing state funds slated 
for the presidential palaces. Mubarak, 84, in detention since April 2011, 
is currently held in a military hospital because of health issues. (AP 
Photo/Amr Nabil, File)The Associated PressCAIRO  Egypt's state news agency 
says the country's top prosecutor has ordered a new investigation into corruption 
allegations against ousted President Hosni Mubarak, a move that will keep 
him detained during his upcoming retrial.The 84-year old Mubarak heads to 
court April 13 over his alleged complicity in the killing of hundreds 
of demonstrators during the protests that ultimately forced him out of office 
in February 2011.An Egyptian appeals court had overturned in January Mubarak's 
life sentence, citing shoddy procedures and ordering the retrial.Mubarak, 
in detention since April 2011, is currently held in a military hospital 
due to poor health. The new investigation focuses on accusations that Mubarak 
and his family pocketed state funds designated for the presidential palaces. 
He faces additional questioning over a period of 15 
 claimed to be based in Saudi Arabia paralyzed the websites of 
Israel's stock exchange and national airline and claimed to have published 
details of thousands of Israeli credit cards.A concerted effort to cripple 
Israeli websites during November fighting in Gaza failed to cause serious 
disruption. Israel said at the time that protesters barraged Israel with 
more than 60 million hacking attempts.An official of the militant Hamas 
movement that rules the Gaza Strip praised the current attack. "God bless 
the minds and the efforts of the soldiers of the electronic battle," 
Ihab Al- Ghussian, Gaza's chief government spokesman, wrote on his official 
Facebook page.

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<strong><center><a href="http://www.pubbollpaiker.us/2942/172/375/1393/2923.10tt71675797AAF1.php"><H3>NASA Doctor Reveals How To Reverse Brain Age</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">a 
local university.  (AP Photo/Steven Senne)The Associated PressIn this March 
27, 2013 photo, Cassie Quinlan, 69, poses for a photo in her 
Concord, Mass., home. Almost 40 years ago, Quinlan drove one of the 
Boston public school buses that took black students from the citys Roxbury 
neighborhood to a predominantly white high school in Charlestown. She said 
that dozens of white protesters would line the curb and police would 
have to make a wall at the bus door so black students 
could get into school. Quinlan said her experiences opened her own eyes 
to black culture, and she became the first white member of a 
black gospel choir at a local university.  (AP Photo/Steven Senne)The Associated 
PressIn this 1974 file photo, police guard while black students board a 
school bus as Boston begins a school busing program. The nonprofit Union 
of Minority Neighborhoods is hosting a group of exercises across Boston 
in 2013, where participants talk about how the citys busing crisis impacted 
them in the 1970s. Organizers hope it will unite people to fight 
for better access to quality public schools for all students, even as 
another new Boston school assignment system starts. (AP Photo/Peter Bregg, 
File)The Associated PressBOSTON  Last fall, Ginnette Powell traveled from 
her home in Boston's Dorchester section to her old middle school in 
South Boston   a journey of just two miles, but one 
that covered a huge emotional distance. Finally, she was able to le
 d suffer in the spotlight. Maybe 
the new pope will keep his distance from the society, for fear 
of giving an appearance of favoritism. Or, he could use his new 
authority to become    from their perspective    
too involved in the society, like John Paul. And they wonder if 
Jesuits would somehow be blamed for any of Francis' decisions that prove 
unpopular.Jesuits were already at a crossroads when Francis was elected. 
Although the order remains the largest in the church for men, membership 
has dropped by more than half since peaking in 1965, Gaunt said.The 
decline came mostly in the West. But In South Asia and India, 
Christianity, and Catholicism specifically, have been growing, and so too 
have the numbers of Jesuits in those areas. Gaunt calls it "the 
changing Jesuit geography." India now has the largest national group of 
Jesuits with just over 3,900 members, followed by the U.S., with just 
under 2,500. About one-third of the world's 17,287 Jesuits came from developing 
countries, a figure that is expected to rise in coming years.For U.S. 
Jesuits, this has meant a long season of wondering where they go 
from here. The order is restructuring in the U.S., merging their 10 
smaller provinces into four larger ones.Lay people now staff most Jesuit 
schools and ministries, so the order has started Jesuit spirituality retreats 
and instruction for lay faculty and staff to help maintain the religious 
identity of what they've built. Among the newer J
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