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GNC Offers TFX Flex as New Benchmark in Joint Health

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (GNC Annoucement)
Sat Aug 31 07:04:40 2013

From: "GNC Annoucement" <GNCAnnoucement@biolabsgmgtbrinny.com>
Date: Sat, 31 Aug 2013 04:04:39 -0700
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@biolabsgmgtbrinny.com>

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Press Release: GNC Announces New Discovery That Provides 2X More Effective Joint Relief

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VIENNA  A top aide to the chief of the U.N. nuclear 
agency has unexpectedly resigned, suggesting tensions among the organization's 
top leadership, diplomats said Friday.The move by IAEA Assistant Director 
General Rafael Mariano Grossi comes at a critical time for the International 
Atomic Energy Agency. It is the outside world's only window on Iran's 
nuclear program, which some nations fear is close to the ability to 
make atomic arms   a goal Iran strenuously denies.IAEA inspectors monitor 
Tehran's known nuclear facilities including its expanding uranium enrichment 
program, which Tehran says is meant only to produce nuclear power and 
for other peaceful uses.  But the United States, Israel, their allies 
and other nations fear the Islamic Republic could use the technology to 
make the core of a nuclear weapon.The agency also is trying to 
kick-start a probe of suspicions that Iran has secretly worked on developing 
nuclear weapons after more than five years of stagnation. Iran denies such 
work and says the allegations are based on falsified intelligence from Israel 
and the West. The two sides plan to resume talks on the 
issue in mid-May.Two diplomats demanded anonymity in exchange for speaking 
The Associated Press about the resignation because they were not authorized 
to discuss internal IAEA matters with reporters.One of them said Grossi 
told Amano he was quitting earlier this week after being told that 
his contract was not being extended. H
around. Lydia 
Zimmerman told KWTX-TV that she, her husband and daughter were in their 
garden in Bynum  13 miles from West  when they heard 
multiple blasts."It sounded like three bombs going off very close to us," 
she said.Lucy Nashed, a spokesman for Perry's office, said personnel from 
several agencies were en route to West or already there, including the 
Texas Commission for Environmental Quality, the state's emergency management 
department and an incident management team. Also responding is the state's 
top urban search and rescue team, the state health department and mobile 
medical units.The U.S. Chemical Safety Board said it was deploying a large 
investigation team to West. American Red Cross crews from across Texas also 
headed to the scene. Red Cross spokeswoman Anita Foster said the group 
was working with emergency management officials in West to find a safe 
shelter for residents displaced from their homes.Swanton said he had no 
details on the number of people who work at the plant, which 
was cited by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality in 2006 for 
failing to obtain or to qualify for a permit. The agency acted 
after receiving a complaint in June of that year of a strong 
ammonia smell.In 2001, an explosion at a chemical and fertilizer plant killed 
31 people and injured more than 2,000 in Toulouse, France. The blast 
occurred in a hangar containing 300 tons of ammonium nitrate, which can 
be used for both fertilizer and exp

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">The Boston bombing suspect who is the subject of a massive manhunt 
reached out to a Massachusetts professor two years ago for help on 
research "rediscovering his Chechen origins," the professor told FoxNews.com 
Friday.Professor Brian Glyn Williams, who teaches the only course in the 
U.S. on the Chechen wars, said Dzhokhar Tsarnaev emailed him in the 
spring of 2011, asking questions on Chechen history for a research project 
he was doing at the Cambridge Rindge and Latin School.Williams said that 
based on conversations with a friend who taught Tsarnaev -- and who 
recommended he reach out to Williams -- he learned that Tsarnaev was 
"studying his past.""He was sort of in the process of vicariously rediscovering 
his Chechen origins," the professor told FoxNews.com.Williams said that 
after the student contacted him, he emailed back a syllabus. He said 
he didn't even remember the interaction until he talked to a friend."It 
freaked me out," he said. "I couldn't believe I communicated with this 
psychopath."The detail comes amid swirling questions about the suspect's 
motivations and roots. Tsarnaev is thought to be of Chechen origin, though 
his family may be from the neighboring region of Dagestan. Chechnya, a 
region in Russia, is known for its bloody conflict with the Russian 
government -- but the region is also home to Islamic extremists.It remains 
unclear what may have motivated the suspects. Their uncle, in an impassioned 
and impromptu press 
  The 2010 report said lands like Chechnya -- as well as 
Pakistan and Somalia -- are seen by "jihadi theoreticians" as places where 
"fighting is not only legitimate but also compulsory." The same report also 
noted Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov has tried to align the insurgency 
"with the global jihadist narrative," supporting the establishment of an 
"Islamic emirate in the Caucasus."Whether Chechens, however, have actually 
gone to the frontlines in Afghanistan and Pakistan is a matter of 
fierce dispute. A Congressional Research Service report earlier this year 
said "some Chechen fighters fighting alongside Taliban/Al Qaeda forces have 
been captured or killed."But other studies have sharply questioned this 
kind of reporting, claiming that American officials and media were buying 
into a Russian narrative that Moscow was simply fighting Islamic terrorists 
in Chechnya.A 2004 report from University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth 
professor Brian Glyn Williams described a more complicated picture."While 
it is certainly possible that Chechen individuals made their way to Afghanistan 
to fight for the Taliban in Afghanistan, the complete absence of even 
a single Chechen POW among the thousands captured by the Northern Alliance 
and the U.S. would clearly refute the wild claims that the Chechens 
formed the 'largest contingent of Al Qaeda's foreign legion'," he wrote.Williams 
told FoxNews.com, rather, that "there's a jihad element that has grown large
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