[42086] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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Cut Out Cigarettes in a new way. You can test it.

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (ezpen.com)
Sat May 9 11:16:01 2015

Date: Sat, 9 May 2015 08:15:58 -0700
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
From: "ezpen.com" <ezpen.com@jeene.work>

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      <p><a href="http://www.jeene.work/unsT1178IW90AK/95QC352AL623A747GX1872083V3231827437" style="font-size:10px;"">Get out of our data here</a>
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          <span style="font-size: 9px ">109 E. 17th Suite 4552 - Cheyenne, WY 82001 </span> 
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        This is ad vertisement. </div>
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ith some funding: The $1-per-person insurance fee goes into effect in 2012. 
But the Treasury Department says it's not likely to be collected for 
another year, though insurers would still owe the money. The fee doubles 
to $2 per covered person in its second year and thereafter rises 
with inflation. The IRS is expected to issue guidance to insurers within 
the next six months."The more concerning thing is not the institute itself, 
but how the findings will be used in other areas," said Kathryn 
Nix, a policy analyst for the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank. "Will 
they be used to make coverage determinations?"The institute's director, Dr. Joe Selby, 
said patients and doctors will make the decisions, not his organization."We are 
not a policy-making body; our role is to make the evidence available," 
said Selby, a primary care physician and medical researcher,But insurance industry representatives 
say they expect to use the research and work with employers to

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hs of speculation that he would leave office, the 70-year-old conservative Democrat 
told supporters in an emailed statement Tuesday that he felt it was 
time he "step away from elective office, spend more time with my 
family, and look for new ways to serve our state and nation.""Therefore, 
I am announcing today that I will not seek re-election," said Nelson, 
a former two-term governor. "Simply put: It is time to move on."Democrats 
banking on Nelson's ability to leverage his centrist stances and capture statewide 
races were left scrambling; many state activists acknowledged being taken by surprise.While 
some floated the names of state Sen. Steve Lathrop of Omaha and 
Nelson's former lieutenant governor, Kim Robak, as possible contenders, many said it 
was too early to know who might run. Messages seeking comment were 
left for Lathrop and Robak.A dream candidate for Democrats: former Nebraska Sen. 
Bob Kerrey. Traveling in India on Tuesday, Kerrey told The Washington 

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 Remembrance of Alexis Marron" was also created in his honor."It's gonna 
be really difficult," Jessica Cruz told MyFoxChicago.com. "He just had a smile 
on his face. It's gonna be really hard to go back to 
school and graduate without him being there."The Associated Press contributed to this 
report.Click here for more on this report from MyFoxChicago.com.

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preme leader" of the party, state and army.Kim was somber in a 
long, dark overcoat as he strode alongside his father's hearse accompanied by 
top party officials behind him and key military leaders on the other 
side of the limousine -- a lineup that was a good look 
at who will be the core leadership in North Korea.North Korea now 
turns to Thursday's memorial ceremony. Although there will be tributes to Kim 
Jong Il, the country will be turning toward Kim Jong Un, analysts 
said."The message will be clear: Kim Jong Un now leads the country 
and there is no alternative," said Kim Yeon-su, a North Korea expert 
at the state-run Korea National Defense University in South Korea.There will also 
be more attention paid to the inner circle forming around Kim Jong 
Un.On Wednesday, he was accompanied by Jang Song Thaek, Kim Jong Il's 
brother-in-law and a vice chairman of the powerful National Defense Commission, who 
is expected to be crucial in helping Kim Jong Un take power.

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MONTERREY, Mexico  Police in the northern Mexico state of Nuevo Leon 
said Tuesday that information provided by arrested members of a kidnapping gang 
has led them to at least seven bodies found buried in shallow 
graves or dumped in a well.By nightfall, Nuevo Leon state police had 
found seven sets of human remains around the cities of Linares and 
Montemorelos, near the border with Tamaulipas state. Four bodies were found burned 
or half-buried, and three others had apparently been thrown down a well.A 
Nuevo Leon state detective who was not authorized to be quoted by 
name said information from a band of five kidnappers detained over the 
weekend by soldiers led police to the bodies.The soldiers detained the gang 
after a woman's relatives alerted a passing army patrol that she was 
being kidnapped.Nuevo Leon security spokesman Jorge Domene said the gang worked for 
the Zetas drug cartel.Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon have been the scene of 
bloody turf battles between the Z

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U.S. troops," he said.While the Kurds have sought control over the oil 
within their northern territory, Baghdad insists the resource should overseen by the 
central government. About 30 percent of Iraq's 143.1 billion barrels of proven 
reserves of conventional crude sit in the Kurdish region.The dispute has festered 
unresolved since the U.S.-led coalition ousted Saddam Hussein in 2003. Parliament has 
failed to signed off on a draft national oil law on sharing 
the resources since 2007, angering the Kurds and making foreign majors leery 
of investing. Baghdad's last two international oil licensing auctions drew limited interest 
by deep-pocketed firms like Exxon Mobil, Royal Dutch Shell and BP PLC.Under 
the Kurdish deal, Exxon Mobil, would explore for crude in six patches 
in northern Iraq, including land claimed by both the Kurds and Arabs 
in northern Ninevah province.More broadly, the issue of the disputed territory, which 
stretches from across the country from the 

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