[37729] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Cure your diabetes forever
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Diabetes Miracle)
Sun Mar 22 15:00:47 2015
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2015 12:00:44 -0700
From: "Diabetes Miracle" <DiabetesMiracle@locorack.com>
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Cure your diabetes forever
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<font color="white" size="1">rnment's Office of Civil Defense.In Iligan, a coastal industrial hub of 330,000
people, Mayor Lawrence Cruz said the city's half a dozen parlors were
full to capacity and no longer accepting bodies. The first burial of
50 or so unclaimed bodies was to take place later Monday in
individual tombs at the city cemetery, he said."For public health purposes, we're
doing this. The bodies are decomposing and there is no place where
we can place them, not in an enclosed building, not in a
gymnasium," Cruz told The Associated Press.He said many of the Iligan dead
-- 279 by official count -- "are just piled and laid outside
the morgues," which ran out of formaldehyde for embalming and coffins."We're using
plastic bags, whatever is available," Cruz said.In nearby Cagayan de Oro city,
the situation was more chaotic and people were resisting mass burials, instead
demanding that bodies be interned until relatives can claim them.About 340 died
in Cagayan de Oro, most of them
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<font color="white" size="1">WASHINGTON The Obama administration is warily watching developments on the Korean
peninsula after the death of North Korea's leader Kim Jong Il and
may postpone decisions on re-engaging the reclusive country in nuclear talks and
providing it with food aid, U.S. officials said Sunday.The administration had been
expected to decide on both issues this week, possibly as early as
Monday, but the officials said Kim's death would likely delay the process.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of
the situation. They said the U.S. was particularly concerned about any changes
that Kim's death might spark in the military postures of North and
South Korea but were hopeful that calm would prevail.The White House said
it was monitoring the situation closely and remained in constant contact with
allies South Korea and Japan, but it offered no substantive comment on
the implications of Kim's death. President Barack Obama spoke with South Korean P
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