[43534] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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Want to be better hearing In 1 7 days?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Hearing LossReversed)
Mon May 25 12:07:23 2015

Date: Mon, 25 May 2015 09:07:22 -0700
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
From: "Hearing LossReversed" <HearingLossReversed@javil.work>

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Better.

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Reverse Hearing Loss. If you click here to unsub

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<div style="margin:0 auto;padding:10px;color:#000000;font-size:12px" align="center">Reverse HearingLoss. If you  <a href="http://www.javil.work/l/lc2FN1529B94QH/100L360OI717U760A1872083RJ1123600013" style="text-decoration:none;">click here to unsubscribe</a><br> 
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          <span style="font-size: 9px ">109 E. 17th Suite 4552 - Cheyenne, WY 82001 </span> 
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er good progress.She is due to appear in court Jan. 17 for 
a probation progress report.Friend FOX411 on Facebook.The Troubled and Talented Lindsay LohanShe 
started as a promising child star, and nobody could have predicted how 
things would go from there.

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File: Sen. Ben Nelson talks to reporters in December 2009. (AP)Nebraska Democratic 
Sen. Ben Nelson, a pivotal figure in the health care debate, announced 
his retirement Tuesday in a letter to Nebraskans, saying, "Simply: it's time 
to move on.""It's time for me to 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 reelection," he said.Nelson's departure is not considered a surprise 
despite efforts from his allies to encourage him to seek reelection, though 
Democrats were taken aback that he chose not to run again while 
holding $3 million in the bank ahead of expected GOP attacks.Sources say 
the senator has been frustrated for awhile with Washington. He was roundly 
scorned for his role in the health care debate by Democrats, who 
were furious with his opposition to the so-called public option and requests 
for exemption on abortion coverage.He was

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razil and Argentina, where thousands more of the implants were sold. Health 
officials in both countries just recommend checkups.Argentine clinics say they'll replace leaky 
implants, but the symptoms aren't always detectable, and Luna says any woman 
with the faulty implants can suffer psychological damage.The replacement surgeries can cost 
up to $3,500 in Argentina, Luna said."In my case, they're OK. I 
check periodically, but I am afraid," she said, recalling that when she 
had them implanted in 2007, she was told they were the best 
in the world, and would last her entire life.How many Argentine women 
received the PIP implants is unknown, although about 13,500 of them were 
imported from 2007 to April 2010, when they were banned.Some plastic surgery 
clinics have said they would cover the cost of removing them, but 
not replacing them, Luna complained.Luna said she wouldn't rule out suing the 
government if it doesn't take action to protect these consumers.Some legisl

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 role in Iran's foreign or military policy.On Monday, the Iranian navy 
warned off a foreign helicopter that had approached the site of a 
10-day naval drill it is currently conducting in international waters beyond the 
Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Persian Gulf.A spokesman for 
the drill, Rear Adm. Mahmoud Mousavi, tells state TV the helicopter left 
the area immediately after the warning Sunday. He gives no other details.Irans 
navy began the 10-day drill on Saturday, and regularly holds war games. 
The country has also been active in fighting piracy in the Gulf 
of Aden.The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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ished in 2010 in the same journal, politely citing a multitude of 
problems with the study's methodology. The Indian researchers responded a month later 
with their own two-paragraph letter defending the methodology and calling for a 
larger study to establish the superiority of antibiotic treatment over surgery.There's no 
word whether that larger study is pending, but the journal's editors retracted 
the original article for reasons of alleged plagiarism, stating that "significant portions 
of the article were published earlier" by other researchers in 2000 and 
1995.#2: Litter breeds crime and discrimination.It sounded so reasonable: Graffiti and litter 
in urban settings can trigger changes in the brain that can lead 
to crime, hatred and discrimination. Alas, the senior author of this April 
2011 paper in Science, Dutch social psychologist Diederik Stapel, might have fabricated 
much of the data.The journal Science retracted the paper in November upon 
realization that

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NEW YORK  Three security contractors including two Americans were released by 
Iraqi Army forces Tuesday after they were held for more than two 
weeks, the chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security announced as 
he demanded a full report on the episode.Republican Peter King identified the 
men as Army veteran Alex Antiohos of West Babylon, N.Y., National Guardsman 
Jonas March of Savannah, Georgia and Kevin Fisher of Fiji.King said they 
were working for a security firm when Iraqi Ministry of Defense officials 
rejected paperwork prepared on their behalf by the Iraqi Ministry of Interior 
and began holding them on Dec. 9.The men weren't charged with any 
crimes and King said it appeared that the men were not injured.He 
said Antiohos, who lives on Long Island, spoke to his wife Tuesday 
evening, and he was expected to be home later this week."She said 
he seems to be doing well," he said.King said they were released 
after efforts by his office, the State Depart

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