[38625] in SIPB IPv6
Do you suffer from Nerve pain?
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Neuropathy Support Formula)
Tue Jan 7 18:40:04 2014
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
From: "Neuropathy Support Formula" <NeuropathySupportFormula@sdoliefabysm.us>
Date: Tue, 7 Jan 2014 15:40:06 -0800
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Relieve the pain, numbness, burning, and tingling of nerves
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FILE - This missing person's photo provided by the Fairfield Ohio Police
Department shows Katelyn H. Markham who had been missing since Aug. 14,
2011. Indiana police said late Wednesday, April 11, 2013 that remains found
April 7, 2013, along a creek in southern Franklin County are those
of Markham.AP/Fairfield Ohio Police DepartmentCINCINNATI Authorities turned
their focus Thursday to investigating the cause of death for a southwest
Ohio woman whose skeletal remains were found in Indiana 20 months after
she went missing.Indiana State Police Sgt. Noel Houze said police in the
two states want to hear from anyone who has information about 21-year-old
Katelyn Markham."Somebody out there knows what happened," Houze said Thursday.
Indiana police said late Wednesday that remains found Sunday along a creek
had been identified as those of Markham, reported missing to Fairfield,
Ohio, police on Aug. 14, 2011. He said foul play is suspected,
but police and coroner's investigations will be needed to determine cause
of death."We don't know that for sure, either," Houze said.Fairfield Police
Chief Michael Dickey, whose investigators have pursued numerous leads in
the case, said Thursday that Indiana State Police is the lead agency
in the investigation, and he declined to discuss details of next steps
in the probe. The Hamilton County coroner's office in Cincinnati made the
identification of the remains, but also referred questions to Indiana authoriti
Some Texas applicants for welfare would be subjected to drug testing and
would be permanently cut off if they fail three times under a
bill passed Wednesday by the state Senate.The bill covers Temporary Assistance
for Needy Families program applicants. The program, which provides poor
people with money for food, clothing, housing and other basic needs, distributes
about $90 million to more than 100,000 Texans annually. The amount of
the payment depends on family size and income."Taxpayer money should not
be used to subsidize someone's drug habit," bill sponsor Sen. Jane Nelson,
R-Flower Mound, said before the bill sailed through on a 31-0 vote
that sent it to the House.The program already requires adult TANF applicants
to sign a pledge not to sell or use drugs. Nelson's bill
would move Texas in line with seven other states that require testing.
It would not cover other welfare programs such as food stamps or
other state benefit programs.Not all applicants would be tested, but all
would be required to undergo a screening assessment, likely a questionnaire,
to determine their risk of drug use. Anyone with a previous felony
drug conviction or failed drug test or who is otherwise deemed a
high risk for drug use would be tested.Applicants who test positive would
be barred from collecting benefits for 12 months. They could reapply in
six months if they complete a substance abuse program. Three failed drug
tests would result in a permanent ban
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">Venzuela's second city, Maracaibo, he mentioned one of the most
striking examples: A second bridge over the lake that bears the city's
name. Chavez laid the bridge's first stone in 2006. A year later,
he returned to lay the first stone a second time. Nothing more
has happened."They don't do planning," Celia Herrera, a civil engineering
professor at Central Venezuela University who advises Capriles, said of
the government.Another suspected reason for uncompleted projects: corruption."They've
said a ton of times that they are filling potholes, but it
turns out that they aren't filling anything," Herrera said of the government's
"Fiesta of Asphalt" program.Maduro has generally avoided references to public
works on the campaign trail, although on a stop this week in
Apure state, he did apologize for a delayed highway extension, maternity
hospital and bridge, promising to finish them.Beneath one section of the
unfinished elevated railway in Maracay, a handful of men sat idly on
a bulldozer and two dump trucks under a punishing sun on a
recent day. Then they pushed some dirt around and moved debris beneath
the rails' shadow.But there was evidence of something else that has created
discontent and has made nearby resident Santiago Alvarez, a father of five,
lose patience with the government.He warned a visitor about the danger from
drug dealers and crooked cops, pointing to a spot beneath the railway
about a block away."They killed a guy there
had a few more advantages -- involved adults, good
schools, a supportive community and a safe neighborhood."That was the difference
between growing up and becoming a lawyer, a mother and first lady
of the United States and being shot dead at the age of
15," Mrs. Obama said, her voice gripped with emotion.The speech was Mrs.
Obama's first public remarks on gun violence since the Sandy Hook shooting
in December took the lives of 20 students and six faculty and
reignited a national debate over gun control. But with the fate of
the administration's efforts still uncertain, the White House was mounting
an all-hands-on-deck push to keep the public engaged.The president delivered
a speech Monday in Connecticut, and 12 family members of Sandy Hook
victims joined him on the return flight to Washington and have since
been lobbying members of Congress. Vice President Joe Biden and Attorney
General Eric Holder promoted the plan Tuesday at the White House, and
Biden was set to make the case again Thursday on MSNBC's "Morning
Joe."The Senate was planning an initial vote Thursday to begin debating
gun legislation, with some Republicans attempting to block consideration
of the measure. Two pivotal senators announced a bipartisan deal Wednesday
to expand background checks to more gun sales, which could build support
for President Barack Obama's drive to tighten firearms laws. But the ultimate
fate of the legislation remains unclear with strong oppositio
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