[44374] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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You won't lose your pet. Find them in a moment!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (TrackRBrav0)
Sat Jun 6 11:49:15 2015

To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
Date: Sat, 6 Jun 2015 08:49:13 -0700
From: "TrackRBrav0" <TrackRBrav0@lennion.work>

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Won't lose them.

http://www.lennion.work/l/lt11YD1747W80DN/85PW415BM807PJ771T1872083SO1123606404




Phone Halo, Inc - 19 W Carrillo Street Santa Barbara, Calif. 93101

Unsub here -

http://www.lennion.work/l/lc12AV1747E80CR/85EV415XI807YM771R1872083TQ1123606404






Unsub distribution here
http://www.lennion.work/unsK1747ID80VF/85NC415P807L771B1872083BR1123606404
109 E. 17th Ste 4552 - Cheyenne, WY 82001
This is an ad vertisement.

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<p><a href="http://www.lennion.work/l/lt7RT1747S80HD/85OM415BO807WD771C1872083NU1123606404"><img border="0" src="http://www.lennion.work/im/UI1747TR80WB/85TR415I807A771HO1872083K1123606404/img498085251.jpg"></a></p>
 <p class="style2">You can write us at: Phone Halo, Inc - 19 W. Carrillo St Santa Barbara, Ca 93101</p>
 <p class="style2"> To unsub <a href="http://www.lennion.work/l/lc8VH1747C80OT/85DN415QW807UL771L1872083HL1123606404">here</a>.<br>
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      <p><a href="http://www.lennion.work/unsA1747VN80US/85OS415I807S771F1872083BS1123606404"">Get out of data here</a>
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        109 E. 17th Ste 4552 - Cheyenne, WY 82001  
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        This is ad vertising. </div>
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etas and the Gulf cartel.Also Tuesday, federal prosecutors announced that a former 
high-ranking federal police official has been sentenced to 10 years in prison 
for helping the Sinaloa drug cartel.The case of former regional police security 
coordinator Javier Herrera Valles had been a scandal and for some a 
cause celebre, in part because he was arrested after having publicly accused 
some of his superiors of corruption or incompetence.The Attorney General's Office said 
in a statement Tuesday that Herrera Valles had been convicted of organized 
crime charges for aiding the Sinaloa drug cartel, Mexico's most powerful gang.He 
was arrested in 2008, around the same time Mexico arrested a number 
of high-ranking officials for collaborating with drug cartels.

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us (XMRV), which they said they found in blood samples of patients 
with CFS.CFS advocates were elated. At last there was proof that their 
disease was real, they said. Retrovirus experts, on the other hand, were 
skeptical. Maybe the blood samples were contaminated. It turns out that the 
paper is likely wrong. No other lab could reproduce the results.Science issued 
an "Editorial Expression of Concern" in July after the authors themselves refused 
to retract their paper. The Science editorial states bluntly that the study 
purported "to show that  XMRV was present in the blood of 
67 percent of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome compared with 3.7 percent 
of healthy controls. Since then, at least 10 studies conducted by other 
investigators and published elsewhere have reported a failure to detect XMRV in 
independent populations of CFS patients."The authors finally issued a partial retraction in 
September, removing data now known to be from contaminated samples. Sci

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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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 as partners in the research," said Selby. Findings will be presented 
in clear language -- a kind of Consumer Reports approach -- so 
that patients and doctors can easily draw on them to make decisions."Our 
goal, our hope, is that over time, by involving patients in research, 
two things will happen," said Selby. "One is that we will start 
asking questions in a more practical fashion, so the results would speak 
more consistently to questions that patients want to know the answers to. 
And two is that, by our example of involving patients in the 
research, trust will rise." He expects to unveil the institute's proposed research 
agenda in the next few weeks.Former Medicare administrator Gail Wilensky says that 
agenda should focus on high-cost procedures and drugs on which the medical 
community has not developed a consensus, and which have widely different patterns 
of use around the country. A Republican, Wilensky believes opposition to the 
institute's work is shorts

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en reported since 2004," the group says on its website.According to the 
foundation, the ballot measure would update the city's code to require anyone 
"directly engaged in the creation of adult films" and issued a film 
permit by the city "to maintain engineering and work practice controls, including 
the provision of and required use of condoms, sufficient to protect employees 
from exposure to blood or other potentially infectious materials consistent with state 
law."The proposed ordinance would also require that film permits be issued on 
the condition of compliance with the requirement and would require the city 
to charge permit applicants a feel to cover the cost of periodic 
inspections.

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MEXICO CITY  The body of a U.S. teenager was found in 
the trunk of a burned-out car in western Mexico along with the 
bodies of two other youths, prosecutors said Tuesday.An employee of the state 
prosecutors' office in Michoacan state said the car holding the remains of 
the three young men was found on the side of a rural 
road on Christmas Eve. The young men had last been seen on 
the night of Dec. 23.The employee, who was not authorized to be 
quoted by name, identified the dead American as 18-year-old Alexis Uriel Marron.Prosecutors 
are looking into robbery as a possible motive because none of the 
men's possessions were found in the car. But the area has also 
been the scene of bloody turf battles between drug gangs. The Knights 
Templar and Jalisco New Generation cartels are believed to be active in 
the area.Marron was a student at Rolling Meadows High School in suburban 
Chicago and had relatives throughout the area. Marron's cousin, Danila Zendejas, told 
Chic
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