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Federal student loan payment relief

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Student Loan Assistance)
Mon Feb 10 15:54:14 2014

Date: Mon, 10 Feb 2014 12:54:13 -0800
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
From: "Student Loan Assistance" <StudentLoanAssistance@gututeasi.us>
Reply-To: <bounce-73800431@gututeasi.us>

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Need help with those Student Loan payments?

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n Emily, who lives in Indiana. She 
was prescribed generic Xanax at age 25, a few months after she'd 
had a baby. She was filled with anxiety, often irrational."I worried that 
someone would feed her something she might choke on," she recalled.When 
the drug didn't help and she became desperate, she admitted herself to 
a psychiatric ward; during the week she was there, relatives cared for 
her little girl.Emily was taken off alprazolam and put on the generic 
form of Klonopin, which is slower-acting. After being released, she followed 
up with her doctor, who continued her on that drug, but Emily 
didn't feel much better on it. Her anxiety attacks persisted."Every day 
was a struggle," she said.After several months, she started looking for 
other doctors to get her off the pills. One wanted her to 
go cold turkey, but she'd been reading up online and knew the 
dangers of benzo withdrawal."Once you've been on Xanax or similar drugs 
for a month or more, you may need to taper off them 
gradually," Birndorf explained.Tapering is a stepladder approach that involves 
slowly decreasing your dose by tiny increments. It may also include switching 
from a faster-acting benzo like Xanax to a slower one, such as 
Klonopin, as the hospital had Emily do."If you've been on a high 
dose for years, tapering from benzos can possibly take much longer than 
with other drugs, like SSRIsmaybe even a full year," Birndorf said.Sometimes, 
she points out, patients don't comply 
a vehicle that could have reached 140 miles 
per hour and easily "outrun" the killer's Ford Ranger-style pickup truck. 
Allocca said Davison had lived in Phoenix, Ariz., at one point and 
was comfortable driving at a speed of 100 miles per hour if 
he needed to.Davison's parents said they have many questions over what led 
up to the murder and have filed a formal request in Maryland 
to view a copy of the 911 transcript.So far, neither the transcript 
nor a recording of the call has been released, with authorities saying 
it is because the investigation is ongoing.Among the questions that agonize 
his parents are: Did Davison drop-back on the highway in order to 
obtain a better description of the vehicle following him? Or did he 
decrease his speed while waiting for police to tell him whether to 
exit the highway as he approached a ramp?Neither parent is convinced that 
a shooting hours earlier is unrelated to the one that killed their 
son. On the night of Friday, Jan. 3, hours before Davison was 
killed, a roadway shooting involving a pickup truck in Monaghan Township, 
Pa., 30 miles away, was reported. Police said shortly after Davison's death 
that there was no evidence indicating the two incidents were connected.The 
shootings occurred roughly seven hours apart, and the gunshots involved 
in the first incident narrowly missed the victim's head. "They ruled out 
that the first shooting was related. How is that?" Davison asked. "Without 
that person i

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">e doctor. 
He suggested increasing the dosage, but she refused. She'd become concerned 
about her reaction to the drug."Between doses, it felt like my spine 
was hooked up to an electrical socket and there was a chemical 
storm inside my head," she said.The symptoms were worst when she woke 
up: "I had to keep my pills beside my bed so that 
before I even opened my eyes, I'd be melting one under my 
tongue. I'd dry heave and cry until it kicked in."Then one morning, 
she experienced what's known as a paradoxical adverse reactiona rare, unexpected 
response to a drug that can't be explained. She had popped her 
pill and was lying there waiting for it to take hold, except 
nothing happened. She felt so scared and shaky that she took another. 
And then, in a half hour, one morefollowed by a fourth one 
30 minutes later. Within minutes of downing the last pill, her legs 
began shaking violently. The toes on her left foot curled up, and 
her tongue stiffened."The next thing I remember is the paramedics running 
in," she said. "I'd had a seizure."The debilitating pangs of interdose withdrawal 
had been awful enough. Now, Kim started to worry about how she 
would ever get off the drug.What makes it even rougher for women 
who become dependent on benzos is that many physicians do not fully 
understand how to wean them off the medication."While most doctors should 
know how to taper properly, not everyone does," Birndorf said.Few women 
are more aware of that tha
 MECHANICSBURG, Ohio  An Ohio man's family is fulfilling his dying wish 
-- to be buried astride his beloved Harley-Davidson motorcycle.But it hasn't 
been easy. The project required an extra-large cemetery plot to accommodate 
a Plexiglas casket for Billy Standley and his 1967 Electra Glide cruiser. 
Embalmers prepared his body with a metal back brace and straps to 
ensure he'll never lose his seat.Standley's family said he'd been planning 
it for years. He said he didn't just want to ride off 
to heaven, he wanted the world to see him do it in 
see-through casket. His sons began fashioning it about five years ago.The 
Dayton Daily News reports that Standley of Mechanicsburg, west of Columbus, 
died of lung cancer Sunday at age 82. He was to be 
buried Friday.
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