[20751] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
NASA Doctor Reveals How To Reverse Brain Age
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Cognizine)
Sat Oct 26 09:34:18 2013
From: "Cognizine" <Cognizine@parmakeclsssi.us>
To: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
Date: Sat, 26 Oct 2013 06:34:19 -0700
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Brain Doctors Hate Him...
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ate for younger girls, even though physicians groups
insist that it is.In Wednesday's filing, the Justice Department said Korman
exceeded his authority and that his decision should be suspended while that
appeal is under way, meaning only Plan B One-Step would appear on
drugstore shelves until the case is finally settled. If Korman's order isn't
suspended during the appeals process, the result would be "substantial market
confusion, harming FDA's and the public's interest" as drugstores receive
conflicting orders about who's allowed to buy what, the Justice Department
concluded.Rather than take matters into his own hands, the Justice Department
argued to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that Korman should
have ordered the FDA to reconsider its options for regulating emergency
contraception. The court cannot overturn the rules and processes that federal
agencies must follow "by instead mandating a particular substantive outcome,"
the appeal states.The FDA actually had been poised to lift all age
limits and let Plan B sell over the counter in late 2011,
when Kathleen Sebelius overruled her own scientists. Sebelius said some
girls as young as 11 were physically capable of bearing children but
shouldn't be able to buy the pregnancy-preventing pill on their own.Sebelius'
move was unprecedented, and Korman had blasted it as election-year politics
-- meaning he was overruling not just a government agency but a
Cabinet secretary.More than
ast month.Across-the-board government spending cuts and higher taxes may
be making businesses more cautious about hiring. And an increase in Social
Security taxes could slow consumer spending. The Federal Reserve said Wednesday
that those policy changes are "restraining economic growth."Still, consumers
are more optimistic that the job market is healing and will deliver
higher pay later this year, according to a survey of April consumer
confidence released this week. And lower gas prices could offset some of
the pinch from the tax increase.The economy grew at an annual rate
of 2.5 percent from January through March, the government said last week.
That was an improvement from the anemic growth of 0.4 percent in
the final three months of last year. Most economists expect growth will
slow in the current quarter to 2 percent or lower.
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">ssock of the papacy.Given the political
intrigues that plague the Vatican, it wasn't much of a stretch of
the imagination to wonder if some cardinals, bishops and monsignors not
to mention ordinary Catholics might continue making Benedict their point
of reference rather than the new pope.However, Benedict made clear on his
final day as pope that he was renouncing the job and pledged
his "unconditional reverence and obedience" to his then-unknown successor.
It was a pledge he repeated in person on March 23 when
Francis went to have lunch with him at Castel Gandolfo.It was during
that visit that the world saw how frail Benedict had become in
the three weeks since his emotional departure from the Apostolic Palace:
Always a man with a purposeful walk, he shuffled tentatively that day,
using his cane.Francis, for his part, seems utterly unfazed by the novel
situation unfolding. He has frequently invoked Benedict's name and work
and has called him on a half-dozen occasions, making clear he has
no intention of ignoring the fact that there's another pope still very
much alive and now living on the other side of the garden
from the Vatican hotel where he lives.Francis' gestures to Benedict during
that March 23 visit were also remarkable: He refused to pray on
the special papal kneeler in the small chapel of Castel Gandolfo, preferring
to join Benedict on a kneeler in the pews, and referring to
his predecessor as his "brother."Now that they'r
JOHANNESBURG Mozambique's rhinoceros population was wiped out more than
a century ago by big game hunters. Reconstituted several years ago, it
has again been driven to extinction, or to the brink of extinction,
by poachers seeking their horns for sale in Asia.A leading rhino expert
told The Associated Press that the last rhino in the southern African
nation has been killed. The warden in charge of the Great Limpopo
Transfrontier Park the only place where the horned behemoths lived
in Mozambique also says poachers have wiped out the
last of the rhinos. Mozambique's conservation director believes a few may
remain.Elephants also could become extinct in Mozambique soon, the warden
of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, Antonio Abacar, told AP. He said
game rangers have been aiding poachers, and 30 of the park's 100
rangers will appear in court soon."We caught some of them red-handed while
directing poachers to a rhino area," Abacar said.A game ranger arrested
for helping poachers in Mozambique's northern Niassa Game Reserve said on
Mozambican Television TVM last week that he was paid 2,500 meticais (about
$80) to direct poachers to areas with elephants and rhinos. Game rangers
are paid between 2,000 and 3,000 meticais ($64 to $96) a month.While
guilty rangers will lose their jobs, the courts serve as little deterrent
to the poachers: killing wildlife and trading in illegal rhino horn and
elephant tusks are only misdemeanors in Mozam
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