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Powerful Anti-Aging Tip – Recommended by 9 out of 10 Dermatologists

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Dr. Oz Skin Secret)
Sat Feb 22 11:34:38 2014

Date: Sat, 22 Feb 2014 08:34:36 -0800
From: "Dr. Oz Skin Secret" <Dr.OzSkinSecret@tipapstmotto.us>
Reply-To: <bounce-73800431@tipapstmotto.us>
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu

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1 Tip To Perfect Skin – REVEALED by Dr. Oz

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LAS VEGAS  The state Legislature has rejected a demand by Nevada 
media for a report commissioned by a panel that recommended the expulsion 
of Assemblyman Steven Brooks.In a 16-page response to a two-page open records 
request, the state Legislative Counsel Bureau cited nine grounds on which 
it said the state public records law doesn't apply to the report, 
which the panel reviewed behind closed doors.It also asserted the Assembly 
had "absolute and paramount power" under the state constitution to conduct 
closed meetings and withhold documents it reviews."All of the documents 
you requested have, from the time they were collected for use at 
the committee hearing, been kept strictly confidential," Legislature lawyer 
Brenda Erdoes wrote in the reply, dated Thursday, to media attorney Donald 
Campbell.Erdoes asserted that Brooks declined a chance to make the materials 
public.Campbell filed the formal open records request March 28 on behalf 
of 13 newspaper and broadcast entities including The Associated Press and 
the Nevada Press Association. He was in court Friday and unavailable for 
immediate comment.Campbell noted previously that the report was produced 
at taxpayer expense for consideration by an elected body about the fate 
of a public official, and was "by its very nature" open to 
public scrutiny. He added that some elements of the report might be 
redacted to comply with federal health privacy laws.Press association executive 
Barry Smith said
UNDATED: This photo released by the Carson City Sheriff's Office shows William 
McCune.APRENO, Nev.  A body believed to be that of Nevada's chief 
insurance examiner was found wrapped in a blanket and bound with duct 
tape Saturday in a river in Carson City, and four suspects were 
arrested in the case, authorities said.Carson City Sheriff Ken Furlong said 
that while a positive identification and cause of death have not been 
officially established, investigators believe the body found by searchers 
in the Carson River is that of William McCune, who disappeared earlier 
this week.Authorities suspected foul play after finding evidence Thursday 
of a bloody, violent struggle in McCune's apartment in Carson City, the 
state's capital. Deputies were called to the apartment after the 62-year-old 
McCune failed to board a flight with a co-worker and other employees 
found no sign of him when they went to his residence.All four 
suspects are from the Carson City area, Furlong said, but detectives were 
unsure of their relationship to McCune or motive for the slaying.Still, 
investigators continue to believe McCune's death concerned "personal" matters 
and was not work-related, the sheriff said. He declined to elaborate.Michael 
Evans, 23, and Anthony Elliot, 20, were booked on murder charges, while 
Raul Garcia, 22, and Makyla Blackmore, 20, were arrested on burglary charges.Evans 
was taken into custody in Carson City, while the others were arrested 
Saturday m



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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">an, a founder of the anti-nuclear 
Plowshares Movement.In Latin America, the Jesuit emphasis on helping the 
poorest peoples often drew the society into political upheaval, including 
the cause of liberation theology, a Latin American-inspired view that Jesus' 
teachings imbue followers with a duty to fight for social and economic 
justice. U.S. Jesuit James Carney was killed in 1983 serving as chaplain 
to a rebel column from Honduras.Pope John Paul II, hoping to re-direct 
the religious order, took the extraordinary step in 1981 of replacing the 
Jesuit's chosen leader with his own representative. The society encompasses 
a range of outlooks, including tradition-minded men. Still, conservative 
Catholics often view Jesuits as a band of disloyal liberals. The day 
after Francis was elected, George Weigel, a John Paul biographer, wrote 
in the conservative National Review magazine that the pope "just might take 
in hand the reform of the Jesuits" that Weigel argued was never 
finished.  (Smolich rejects any suggestion that the order isn't faithful 
to the church or its teachings.)It's too early to say how these 
past conflicts could influence Francis and his relationships with the society. 
He had disavowed liberation theology as a misguided strain of Catholic tenets, 
while still maintaining a focus on the economic failings of Western-style 
capitalism and the need to close the divide between rich and poor.Jesuits 
also worry that the religious order coul
 d suffer in the spotlight. Maybe 
the new pope will keep his distance from the society, for fear 
of giving an appearance of favoritism. Or, he could use his new 
authority to become    from their perspective    
too involved in the society, like John Paul. And they wonder if 
Jesuits would somehow be blamed for any of Francis' decisions that prove 
unpopular.Jesuits were already at a crossroads when Francis was elected. 
Although the order remains the largest in the church for men, membership 
has dropped by more than half since peaking in 1965, Gaunt said.The 
decline came mostly in the West. But In South Asia and India, 
Christianity, and Catholicism specifically, have been growing, and so too 
have the numbers of Jesuits in those areas. Gaunt calls it "the 
changing Jesuit geography." India now has the largest national group of 
Jesuits with just over 3,900 members, followed by the U.S., with just 
under 2,500. About one-third of the world's 17,287 Jesuits came from developing 
countries, a figure that is expected to rise in coming years.For U.S. 
Jesuits, this has meant a long season of wondering where they go 
from here. The order is restructuring in the U.S., merging their 10 
smaller provinces into four larger ones.Lay people now staff most Jesuit 
schools and ministries, so the order has started Jesuit spirituality retreats 
and instruction for lay faculty and staff to help maintain the religious 
identity of what they've built. Among the newer J
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