[Swlugevents] 1 weird food that KILLS blood pressure 74103107

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Mon Apr 7 13:17:20 UTC 2014


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ised Watt as a first-rate selection. Both were 
classmates at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Bowles, the 
Democrat in a debt-tackling partnership with former Republican Sen. Alan 
Simpson of Wyoming, said Watt brings "a bright mind, great work habits 
and an understanding of how Washington works to the job."Hugh McColl, former 
Bank of America chairman and CEO, also welcomed Watt's nomination. McColl 
said he has known Watt for four decades, first meeting him through 
his brother-in-law, former Rep. John Spratt, D-S.C., who attended Yale Law 
School at the same time as Watt."What he brings to everything, doesn't 
matter the subject, is an open mind," McColl said. "He has clarity 
of thought."Charlotte is a major banking center, and the top donors to 
Watt's political campaigns over the years have been bank political action 
committees and bank officials and employees.His nomination comes nearly 
a year after DeMarco, who has been acting director, stood by a 
decision to bar Fannie and Freddie from reducing principal for borrowers 
at risk of foreclosure, resisting pressure from the administration. DeMarco 
long has opposed allowing the mortgage giants to offer principal reduction.In 
March, attorneys general from nine states, led by Democrats Eric Schneiderman 
of New York and Martha Coakley of Massachusetts, sent Obama a letter 
saying that Fannie and Freddie under DeMarco have been a "direct impediment 
to our economic recovery."
wasn't seriously 
injured Sunday when his horse stumbled and he pitched into the dirt 
track at the hippodrome on the outskirts of the capital, Ashgabat. But 
the fall was certainly a wound to the pride of the 55-year-old 
Central Asian leader, whose all-powerful personality cult portrays him as 
effortlessly competent.Thousands of people were in the stands for the race 
that celebrated Turkmenistan's renowned desert racehorse breed, the Akhal-Teke. 
But state television's video of the race cut off just before the 
fall and the extensive written reports on the event didn't mention the 
plunge.All domestic broadcasting in Turkmenistan is state-run; newspapers 
are either state-run or under heavy government supervision. Media criticism 
of the president is non-existent and elaborate praise of him is ubiquitous 
in this nation of 5 million, wedged between the Caspian Sea and 
Iran, Afghanistan and Uzbekistan.Turkmenistan's security agencies reportedly 
went into high gear to try to block video or images of 
the president's fall from slipping out to the rest of the world. 
The opposition-in-exile group Gundogar cited witnesses as saying police 
were carefully checking the computers, tablets, mobile phones and cameras 
of departing passengers at Ashgabat's airport. The horse celebration had 
attracted an array of foreign horse enthusiasts.Video obtained by The Associated 
Press shows a rider falling when his horse stumbles just after crossing 
the finish line 

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