[Swlugevents] 1 weird food that KILLS blood pressure
Blood Pressure Solution
BloodPressureSolution at paranadiegoobi.us
Fri Jan 31 00:02:06 UTC 2014
1 food that kills high blood pressure
http://www.paranadiegoobi.us/3901/176/387/1414/2962.10tt74103107AAF33.php
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ddition to cash-strapped county coffers, especially in the Northwest.
In recent years, the law has acted as a subsidy for states
and counties hard hit by logging declines triggered by measures to protect
threatened species.Idaho's Valley County, for example, would have to return
more than $128,000 from its budget of $2.5 million for roads and
schools. That leaves Gordon Cruickshank, chairman of the Valley County commission,
in a no-win position. Should he forgo the repaving of even a
single mile of the county's 300 miles of paved roads, defer maintenance
on a bridge or lay off two county employees?"We are struggling really
hard now to figure out what to do," Cruickshank said. "It's a
tough pill to swallow that they sent these payments out just a
few months before sequestration, and now they want them back."The Forest
Service has paid billions of dollars to counties over the decades, but
the receipts dwindled as logging on national forests dropped precipitously
in the 1990s -- first in the Northwest to protect the northern
spotted owl and salmon, and then later across the country as concerns
grew over the impact of clear-cut logging on wildlife and clean water.In
2000, Wyden led the charge for a new law, called the Secure
Rural Schools Act, a way for the government to pay counties that
no longer could depend on revenue from logging in federal forests. But
the law has expired, and the last payments went out in January.
Wyden and other l
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa After fleeing to Israel following an immigration raid
in 2008, a former manager at a kosher slaughterhouse in Iowa finally
appeared in a U.S. courtroom Friday to face charges that he conspired
to exploit immigrant workers for profit.His hands and feet shackled, Hosam
Amara walked slowly into the federal courtroom in Cedar Rapids. Bald, short
and stocky, the 48-year-old former poultry production manager at the Agriprocessors
plant in Postville wore an orange jailhouse jumpsuit and a stone-faced demeanor.Amara
pleaded not guilty to an indictment charging him with conspiring to harbor
workers who were in the country illegally and conspiring to provide false
immigration papers at what was the nation's largest kosher slaughterhouse.
He faces 25 counts related to harboring and two counts related to
document fraud.Amara was ordered jailed pending a trial scheduled for July
1 after assistant U.S. Attorney Peter Deegan said the government considered
him a flight risk.The brief arraignment was a routine hearing, but was
a long time in the making.Prosecutors say Amara fled to Israel, where
he has citizenship, with his family shortly after federal agents descended
on Agriprocessors in May 2008, arresting 389 workers in what was the
largest immigration raid at the time. He was indicted six months later
and became a fugitive from justice when he could not be found
and did not turn himself in.Israeli authorities acting on a U.S. extr
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