[Abel-tasman] 1 weird food that KILLS blood pressure

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Fri Dec 20 19:37:31 CET 2013


1 food that kills high blood pressure

http://www.mhcegbcc.us/3519/176/387/1414/2962.10tt62883642AAF17.php






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If you bought a Powerball ticket with the numbers 1, 6, 7, 
20, and 49 with a Powerball of 23 on or just before 
August 25 of last year at Playland Market in Rye, N.Y., you 
bought a winning ticket for $1 million.But you'll have to hurry. The 
deadline to claim the prize is Sunday, and if no one steps 
forward, the money goes back into the lottery's prize pool, to be 
claimed by future potential winners.It won't be for lack of trying on 
Playland Market owner Ralph Alfalahi's part. USA Today reports that Alfalahi's 
posted a sign with the winning numbers on it in his shop 
window in the hope that someone will have his or her memory 
jogged."I have no idea who it was," Alfalahi told the paper. "I 
wish I knew."New York Lottery spokeswoman Christy Calicchia says that $28 
million in lottery prizes have gone unclaimed in the first four months 
of this year. In 2012, a total of $65 million was left 
on the table by forgetful players. According to Calicchia, some players 
put the ticket through the wash, forget they bought it in the 
first place, or don't realize when there's more that one drawing prize.For 
the record, the winnings amount to $662,000 after state and federal taxes, 
and wouldn't come close to the biggest unclaimed prize in New York 
lottery history. That honor goes to a $68 million Mega Millions ticket 
sold in Brooklyn in 2002.Click for more from USA TODAY
ic and social challenges. Bo's downfall 
also has been widely perceived as the result of his defeat in 
party infighting ahead of China's once-a-decade leadership transition last 
fall.In a rare show of openness, the court has been publicizing details 
of the trial in a bid to lend credibility to what is 
widely seen as a political show trial. Bo, in return, has refrained 
from using the trial as a stage on which to denounce the 
administration and the opponents who purged him   which would likely 
be the leadership's worst nightmare."So far, the worst has been avoided," 
said Ding Xueliang, a Chinese politics expert at Hong Kong University of 
Science and Technology. "He's been trying to play the game within the 
limitations set up by the Chinese leadership. He does not talk about 
politically sensitive things, even though everybody inside and outside China 
knows that he's in trouble for politics."Still, the ousted leader mounted 
an unexpectedly spirited defense against charges of abuse of power and of 
netting $4.3 million through corruption, recanting earlier confessions and 
rarely expressing contrition as he sought to lay the blame for most 
of the misdeeds on his wife and others. He deftly cross-examined witnesses, 
and was selectively unable to recall key details when the questioning turned 
to him.It appeared to be Bo's last-ditch effort to repair the damage 
the scandal wrought on the clean, populist image he had so carefully 
cultivated for ye
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