[16703] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Boost Your Metabolism with Pure Garcinia Extract!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Pure Garcinia Cambogia Extract)
Fri Jun 28 15:05:45 2013
Date: Fri, 28 Jun 2013 12:05:24 -0700
From: "Pure Garcinia Cambogia Extract" <PureGarciniaCambogiaExtract@mnovapyin.net>
To: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
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100% Organic Weight Loss - Pure Garcinia Extract!
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President Obama said Thursday he was comfortable with his administration's
decision to allow over-the-counter purchases of a morning-after pill for
anyone 15 and older.The Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday had lowered
the age at which people can buy the Plan B One-Step morning-after
pill without a prescription to 15 - younger than the current limit
of 17. The FDA decided that the pill could be sold on
drugstore shelves near condoms, instead of locked behind pharmacy counters.Obama,
speaking at a news conference while in Mexico, said the FDA's decision
was based on "solid scientific evidence."What's still unclear is whether
the administration will prevail on its appeal of a court order that
would lift all age limits on purchasers of the pill.That decision to
appeal set off a storm of criticism from reproductive rights groups, who
denounced it as politically motivated and a step backward for women's health."We
are profoundly disappointed. This appeal takes away the promise of all women
having timely access to emergency contraception," Susannah Baruch, Interim
President & CEO of the Reproductive Health Technologies Project, said in
a statement late Wednesday."It is especially troubling in light of the Food
and Drug Administration's move yesterday to continue age restrictions and
ID requirements, despite a court order to make emergency contraception accessible
for women of all ages. Both announcements, particularly in tandem, highlight
B-52 bombers, for the first time. The
paper reports U.S. officials have demonstrated an earlier version of the
bomb's capabilities to Israeli leaders several times recently by showing
them a video of the bomb hitting its target in high-altitude testing.Pentagon
officials view the development of the weapon as critical to convincing Israelit
can rely on the U.S. to stop Iran from developing nukes, and
that the Israeli military cannot do so on its own.According to the
Wall Street Journal, the new version of the MOP has advanced components
that would allow it to evade Iranian defense systems to reach the
Fordow nuclear complex, which is by numerous accounts buried under a mountain
in Iran. This upgraded version has not yet been dropped from a
plane."It gives us a far greater capability to reach and destroy an
enemy's weapons of mass destruction that are located in well protected underground
facilities... to a magnitude far greater than we have now," Pentagon Spokesman
Capt. John Kirby said.Kirby denied the bombs are designed to target Iran,
even though it is the only country known to have buried its
nuclear weapons program."The system is not aimed at any one country, it's
to develop a capability we believe we need," Kirby said. That remark
was met by audible groans and various comments of disbelief from the
Pentagon press corps.Boeing successfully tested the bomb on March 17, 2007
at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.Pentagon Spokesma
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> The White House budget office is recalculating how to apply automatic spending
cuts for a handful of agencies, freeing up almost $4 billion for
the Pentagon and another $1 billion or so for Homeland Security Department
and NASA.Capitol Hill aides familiar with the White House changes say the
administration has identified almost $5 billion in cuts that can be restored
under its reading of the arcane budget rules governing the across-the-board
cuts, known as sequestration. The calculations would restore $5 billion
of the scheduled $85 billion in automatic sequestration cuts.An administration
official confirmed the calculations Friday but declined to comment further
because the process is ongoing. The official and congressional aides spoke
on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the
changes publicly.The move comes amid increasing public pressure to find
ways to lessen the impact of sequestration. Federal agencies are warning
that the mandatory cuts could mean cutbacks in services. Last week, Congress
passed and President Obama signed legislation giving the Federal Aviation
Administration the ability to avoid furloughs that were causing flight delays
by tapping money in other accounts.The cuts officially began in March after
Congress and Obama could not reach an agreement on a broader budget
deal. The automatic cuts had been imposed under a hard-fought 2011 debt
and budget pact.The cuts have so far failed to live
g home and had no prior criminal record. She
also said a terrorist-related charge shouldn't automatically deny release."The
word 'terrorism' is a word that tends to taint everything," she told
the court.She also gestured to the back of the courtroom, where dozens
of members of his community sat, and she assured the judge they
would also watch over Tounisi and see that he stays out of
trouble."They are committed to being part of his life," she said. "That
offers a backstop to the family."Judge Martin said repeatedly that his decision
to grant Tounisi release was a close call. He told Tounisi's father,
Ahmad Tounisi, that a landline must be installed in the Aurora family
home before his son could be released to comply with home
confinement and electronic monitoring.The judge told Tounisi's father that
he will be obliged to contact authorities immediately if his son takes
"one step out of the house." The elder Tounisi said he understood
and would comply.Tounisi would be released on a $50,000 unsecured bond,
meaning neither he nor his family would be required to put the
money down to secure his release. But if he fled, the court
would order payment of the full $50,000.Tounisi, a U.S. citizen, was snared
in an Internet sting after contacting a sham website set up by
the FBI that purported to connect would-be fighters with terrorists, federal
prosecutors said.He is charged with one count of attempting to provide material
support to a forei
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