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No more pills or capsules to swallow

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Yacon Diet Spray)
Sat Feb 15 21:02:29 2014

Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 18:02:26 -0800
From: "Yacon Diet Spray" <YaconDietSpray@kenedymacychaws.us>
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
Envelope-to: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu

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Spray your way to better health

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SKOPJE, Macedonia  Macedonia's parliament has adopted a bill imposing chemical 
castration on repeat offenders convicted of sexually abusing children -- 
but the country's leading child protection group said Wednesday that the 
law is still too lenient.The Megjasi child protection group, which had campaigned 
for the procedure to be imposed on pedophiles, said the penalty should 
be mandatory even for first-time offenders.Lawmakers voted Monday to make 
penalties harsher for convicted pedophiles, increasing the maximum sentence 
from 15 years to life imprisonment and imposing chemical castration on second-time 
offenders, with the procedure to be imposed on their release from prison. 
It introduces a minimum 15-year prison term for severe sexual offenses against 
minors, while other sexual-related crimes against children are punishable 
by between three and 10 years in prison.The legislation also offers reduced 
prison sentences to first-time offenders agreeing to undergo the procedure 
voluntarily.The procedure involves regular injections that decrease the 
production of testosterone. The bill doesn't specify a length of time for 
the treatment.If imposed after an initial conviction, "chemical castration 
would prevent first time offenders repeating the crime," said Megjasi head 
Dragi Zmijanac, adding that the rights group's proposal for released offenders 
to be tagged with electronic bracelets was not accepted and didn't make 
it into the legislation.Zm
A City of Hutchison, Kan., front end loader clears snow from intersections 
on S. Main St. Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2014. The winter storm dumped 
more than 10 inches of snow on the city from late Monday 
to late Tuesday. (AP Photo/The Hutchinson News, Travis Morisse)The Associated 
PressLONDON  The price of oil rose Wednesday on prospects U.S. demand 
will hold up amid cold weather, offsetting worries about a slowdown in 
emerging economies.By late afternoon in Europe, the benchmark U.S. crude 
contract for March delivery was up 42 cents to $97.78 a barrel 
in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It gained 76 
cents to close at $97.19 on Monday in New York.Brent crude, a 
benchmark for international oil used by many U.S. refineries, was up 20 
cents at $104.93 on the ICE exchange in London.Northeastern U.S. is bracing 
for a second storm of the week, forcing classes to be canceled 
and government and business offices to close. Anywhere from a few inches 
to a foot or more of snow is expected to fall on 
East Coast states, and some places are expected to get freezing rain 
and sleet.The cold is expected to increase demand for heating fuels, driving 
up the cost of crude oil as well.Expectations for higher demand offset 
lingering concerns about an economic slowdown in China and some emerging 
markets that have caused turmoil in stock markets.Also helping were U.S. 
economic indicators released Wednesday that were mostly upbeat. A private 
payro

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">JERUSALEM  Israel's finance minister says he will stop funding for ultra-Orthodox 
seminaries whose students do not enlist into the military.Yair Lapid's announcement 
Wednesday was in response to an order from the Israeli Supreme Court.Ultra-Orthodox 
Jews have for years been exempt from military service, which is compulsory 
for Jewish Israelis. The arrangement has caused widespread resentment among 
Israel's secular majority and featured prominently in last year's election.A 
new system that would gradually reduce the number of exemptions and require 
all to register for service awaits parliamentary approval.The ultra-Orthodox 
have been demonstrating against the plan and condemned the court decision. 
They claim the military will expose their youth to secularism and undermine 
their devout lifestyle.
 GREENFIELD, Ind.  A central Indiana man says he quickly recognized his 
son when he saw him for the first time since his mother 
abducted him as a little boy 18 years ago.Steven Slinkard of Greenfield 
tells the Daily Reporter (http://bit.ly/Mt6hl8 ) his now-23-year-old son 
Nathan was carrying a picture of them together from before the boy's 
mother fled with him and two siblings to Mexico in 1995.Authorities say 
Nathan Slinkard walked into the U.S. Consulate in Guadalajara last month 
and asked to return home. He arrived last week in Indianapolis.Steven Slinkard 
says he's glad his son is back and is being patient in 
reuniting with him. He says he wants to also see his other 
son and daughter and hopes they know he never gave up on 
finding them.___Information from: (Greenfield) Daily Reporter, http://www.greenfieldreporter.com
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