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Without medication: Lower your high blood pressure with a deep sea mineral

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Doctor HaengWoo Lee)
Tue Jul 30 22:28:17 2013

Date: Tue, 30 Jul 2013 19:28:14 -0700
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Doctor HaengWoo Lee" <DoctorHaengWooLee@rfclawkdall.info>

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Blood Pressure Myth Exposed...?

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 e, Maine.  Proulx said he once chased Christopher 
Knight.  Knight, known as the North Pond Hermit, was arrested Thursday, 
April 4, 2013, while stealing food from another camp in Rome. Authorities 
said he may be responsible for more than 1,000 burglaries. (AP Photo/Robert 
F. Bukaty))The Associated PressROME, Maine  Cottage owners on a central 
Maine lake are expressing relief that a so-called hermit is no longer 
at large.Law enforcement officials say 47-year-old Christopher Knight lived 
in the woods for 27 years and may be responsible for more 
than 1,000 burglaries of food and other items. Authorities arrested Knight 
last week after he tripped a surveillance sensor while allegedly stealing 
food from a camp for special needs people.Authorities are sorting through 
Knight's lair in the woods, but the land's owner is turning away 
others who have hiked there to get a look.Among them was Frank 
Ten Broeck, a retired New Jersey police official who has a cottage 
nearby. Ten Broeck says it's "mind-boggling" that Knight could survive through 
Maine's severe winters for so long.
 Venzuela's second city, Maracaibo, he mentioned one of the most 
striking examples: A second bridge over the lake that bears the city's 
name. Chavez laid the bridge's first stone in 2006. A year later, 
he returned to lay the first stone a second time. Nothing more 
has happened."They don't do planning," Celia Herrera, a civil engineering 
professor at Central Venezuela University who advises Capriles, said of 
the government.Another suspected reason for uncompleted projects: corruption."They've 
said a ton of times that they are filling potholes, but it 
turns out that they aren't filling anything," Herrera said of the government's 
"Fiesta of Asphalt" program.Maduro has generally avoided references to public 
works on the campaign trail, although on a stop this week in 
Apure state, he did apologize for a delayed highway extension, maternity 
hospital and bridge, promising to finish them.Beneath one section of the 
unfinished elevated railway in Maracay, a handful of men sat idly on 
a bulldozer and two dump trucks under a punishing sun on a 
recent day. Then they pushed some dirt around and moved debris beneath 
the rails' shadow.But there was evidence of something else that has created 
discontent and has made nearby resident Santiago Alvarez, a father of five, 
lose patience with the government.He warned a visitor about the danger from 
drug dealers and crooked cops, pointing to a spot beneath the railway 
about a block away."They killed a guy there 

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> t get our 
cell provider at the time to release that information, Missey Smith told 
FoxNews.com. This is not an issue of privacy. Its not a matter 
of content  were not asking for text messages or information about 
who the person is contacting. Were simply asking for the location of 
the phone.This law costs zero to implement, she added. And it absolutely 
saves lives.Such was the case in Loudon County, Tenn., in May 2012, 
one month after the governor signed the bill into law. Local authorities 
there were able to quickly obtain cellphone records from Verizon leading 
them to a suspected child rapist who was believed to have snatched 
a child."They had reason to believe the child was in imminent danger, 
and we were able to use the Kelsey Smith Act to obtain 
the location of the suspects cellphone without having to go through a 
court order process," said Jennifer Estes, president of the Tennessee Emergency 
Number Association.In most cases, victims of abductions by strangers are 
killed within a very narrow window of time -- making it imperative 
for law enforcement to obtain cellphone records quickly."Time is of the 
essence when a child is missing -- the first 3 hours are 
critical to recovering a child alive," John Ryan, chief executive officer 
of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, said in an 
email to FoxNews.com. "Law enforcement must be able to obtain cellphone 
locations as quickly as possible in these circumstances. We supp
 A group of education organizations and state leaders is proposing a kind 
of national treaty that would regulate online education. The arrangement, 
announced Thursday, would create a common market and make it easier for 
institutions to enroll students anywhere in the country.Currently, regulations 
that authorize universities' and companies' online courses vary from state 
to state.The proposed state compact would also create a uniform set of 
consumer protections. That could give students in some states new recourse 
to complain to state regulators about a program that's based elsewhere. 
But in some states, the common standard could dilute oversight.About 7 million 
U.S. students currently access college courses online.
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