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No more pills or capsules to swallow

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Slim Spray)
Sat Dec 28 05:00:59 2013

Envelope-to: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Slim Spray" <SlimSpray@coplayrichbi.us>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Sat, 28 Dec 2013 02:00:57 -0800

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Spray your way to better health

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der international supervision.The United States and Russia have been trying 
to convene a peace conference in Geneva since May to broker a 
political solution to the Syrian conflict that activists say has killed 
more than 120,000 people and displaced millions more.Speaking to Assad by 
telephone, Russian leader Vladimir Putin "emphasized efforts taken by Russia 
together with its partners to prepare a Geneva-2 international conference 
and gave a positive assessment of Bashar Assad's readiness to send a 
Syrian government delegation there," the Kremlin said.The Syrian government 
has said it will take part in the peace talks, although officials 
have said they will not talk to armed rebels or members of 
the main Syrian opposition group in exile. Its avowed willingness to attend 
the Geneva conference coincides with a military offensive that has seen 
Assad's forces seize ground near Damascus and in the northern province of 
Aleppo.The main Western-backed opposition group, the Syrian National Coalition, 
said in a statement Monday it would only attend the Geneva talks 
if humanitarian aid is allowed to reach besieged areas and the government 
releases political prisoners. The group itself wants any future transitional 
government to exclude Assad and his close allies, a demand the Syrian 
government has rejected.The Associated Press contributed to this report.Click 
here for more from The Telegraph.
Jan. 10, 2013 - FILE photo of parents playing with their children 
at a shopping mall in Beijing.  China will loosen its decades-old 
one-child policy and abolish a much-criticized labor camp system, its ruling 
Communist Party said.  Friday,APBEIJING  China will loosen its decades-old 
one-child policy by allowing two children for families with one parent who 
was an only child and will abolish a much-criticized labor camp system, 
its ruling Communist Party said Friday.The changes were part of a key 
policy document released by the official Xinhua News Agency following a 
four-day meeting of party leaders through Tuesday in Beijing. The document 
also seeks to map out China's economic policy for coming years.The labor 
camp -- or "re-education through labor" -- system was established to punish 
early critics of the Communist Party but now is used by local 
officials to deal with people challenging their authority on issues including 
land rights and corruption.Pu Zhiqiang, a prominent Beijing lawyer who has 
represented several former labor camp detainees in seeking compensation, 
welcomed the abolition of the extra-legal system."There have been many methods 
used recently by this government that are against the rule of law, 
and do not respect human rights, or freedom of speech, but by 
abolishing the labor camps ... it makes it much harder for the 
police to put these people they clamp down on into labor camps," 
Pu said."This is progress," Pu said.Chi

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">BEIJING  China's leaders have promised to open its markets wider to 
private and foreign competitors in a sweeping reform plan aimed at rejuvenating 
a slowing, state-dominated economy.The pledges come in a report issued Friday 
that is meant to serve as a blueprint for economic development in 
the coming decade. It was issued following a closely watched Communist Party 
conference that ended this week.Chinese leaders are under pressure to replace 
a tapped-out growth model based on exports and investment.The ruling party 
pledged in Friday's report to allow the creation of privately owned banks 
and to allow the market to allocate resources   moves that 
will help more efficient private companies.As for foreign companies, the 
plan pledges to ease limits on foreign investment in e-commerce and other 
industries.
 der international supervision.The United States and Russia have been trying 
to convene a peace conference in Geneva since May to broker a 
political solution to the Syrian conflict that activists say has killed 
more than 120,000 people and displaced millions more.Speaking to Assad by 
telephone, Russian leader Vladimir Putin "emphasized efforts taken by Russia 
together with its partners to prepare a Geneva-2 international conference 
and gave a positive assessment of Bashar Assad's readiness to send a 
Syrian government delegation there," the Kremlin said.The Syrian government 
has said it will take part in the peace talks, although officials 
have said they will not talk to armed rebels or members of 
the main Syrian opposition group in exile. Its avowed willingness to attend 
the Geneva conference coincides with a military offensive that has seen 
Assad's forces seize ground near Damascus and in the northern province of 
Aleppo.The main Western-backed opposition group, the Syrian National Coalition, 
said in a statement Monday it would only attend the Geneva talks 
if humanitarian aid is allowed to reach besieged areas and the government 
releases political prisoners. The group itself wants any future transitional 
government to exclude Assad and his close allies, a demand the Syrian 
government has rejected.The Associated Press contributed to this report.Click 
here for more from The Telegraph.
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