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If you have sugar issues read this.

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (HarvardDept.)
Thu May 28 12:04:41 2015

Date: Thu, 28 May 2015 09:04:32 -0700
To: <sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu>
From: "HarvardDept." <HarvardDept.@repitor.work>

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authorities continued to resist the Arab League efforts.Activists said four soldiers were 
killed and 12 others wounded in the ambush Wednesday that targeted a 
joint military and security convoy and that was carried out by defectors 
in the southern province of Daraa.The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, 
which reported the ambush, also said troops conducted raids and arrests in 
villages in the south, forcing residents who have been on strike for 
almost three weeks to open up their shops.The Local Coordination Committees also 
said the army stormed the village of Khirbet Ghazaleh with bulldozers to 
break the strike that lasted 18 days.The Observatory said two people died 
Wednesday in Homs, one by fire from security forces fire and the 
other from wounds sustained in shooting the day before.The team of about 
60 Arab League monitors arrived in Syria on Monday night -- the 
first foreign observers allowed in since March, when the uprising against Preside

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Thousands of American troops are returning home from overseas. Those whose military 
service is ending will be entering the civilian job market at a 
time when employment is tough for anyone to find."Our troops are coming 
home and we need to be ready," Sen. Michael Bennet says. He 
has proposed legislation to create a National Veterans Foundation that would operate 
much like the National Parks Foundation already does."Rather than creating a new 
bureaucracy or entity to take the place of existing organizations supporting veterans, 
the foundation would better utilize the public and private resources that already 
exist at no cost to the taxpayer," according to the Colo. Democrat.Bennet 
says the need was great even before the decision to end U.S. 
involvement in Iraq and reduce the number of troops serving in Afghanistan."The 
unemployment rate for post-9/11 veterans in 2010 was 11.5 percent and for 
young veterans, 18 to 24 years old, it even spiked to 21.1 
percent." A

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SACRAMENTO, Calif.  Rescue firefighters responded to a Southwest Airlines flight in 
distress after two tires blew on the runway Tuesday evening, leaving the 
jet and its passengers grounded.The left main tires blew at about 6:15 
p.m. as Southwest flight 2287 was departing for Seattle, Sacramento International Airport 
spokeswoman Laurie Slothower said.Southwest Airlines spokeswoman Katie McDonald said the pilot quickly 
aborted the takeoff and emergency crews were called in to hose down 
the 737 as a precautionary measure. They later set up a portable 
stairway to let the 130 passengers off the plane."I want to stress 
that there were no injuries tonight, and the tires never caught on 
fire," Slothower said.McDonald said all passengers were being booked onto other flights.Officials 
have not determined what caused the blowout and the incident is being 
investigated. In the meantime, one of the airport's two runways remains closed.

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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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Particles ejected by recent solar storms are due to slam into Earth 
over the next few days, possibly causing super-charged northern lights displays and 
temporary radio blackouts in some areas, experts say.On Monday (Dec. 26), the 
sun unleashed a massive eruption of solar plasma known as a coronal 
mass ejection (CME). The CME's fast-moving charged particles should squarely strike Earth's 
magnetic field at about 3:20 p.m. EST (2020 GMT) Wednesday, give or 
take seven hours, according to the website Spaceweather.com.The particles from another CME 
could deliver a glancing blow to our planet a few hours earlier 
on Wednesday, Spaceweather.com reported.The two impacts will likely spawn minor and/or moderate 
geomagnetic storms at high latitudes on Wednesday and Thursday. If they're powerful 
enough, geomagnetic storms can temporarily disrupt GPS signals, radio communications and power 
grids."Category G1 (Minor) geomagnetic storms are expected 28 and 29 December due 
to mul

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ts during their stay.Willis's DJing turn did not get quite as high 
marks as her mother's moves, a spy said.Friend FOX411 on Facebook.Ironically, Moore 
and Kutcher headed to Parrot Cay just last month for a romantic 
getaway, to try and repair their marriage and celebrate Moore's 49th birthday, 
after Kutcher was caught cheating with Sara Leal, 22.But shortly after their 
tropical escape, Moore announced she would file for divorce. Moore and Kutcher 
often vacationed on the island at the private residence of Moore's ex, 
Bruce Willis.Other celebrities in Parrot Cay for the holidays included Charlize Theron, 
with her mother, and "Mission: Impossible -- Ghost Protocol" producer J.J. Abrams 
and his wife, Katie McGrath.Reps for Moore could not be reached. A 
rep for Parrot Cay declined to comment.Is Demi Moore Aging Backwards?Don't call 
her a cougar!


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