[Vtigercrm-aclgroup] Next Miracle Solution to this Severe Problem

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Sat Jul 13 20:15:14 UTC 2013


Bed Bug Infestations Spreading Fast


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a's most important ally, as well as with Seoul and Tokyo.In Seoul, 
South Korean Defense Minister Kim Kwan-jin told a parliamentary committee 
Monday that North Korea still appeared poised to launch a missile from 
its east coast, though he declined to disclose the source of his 
information.Kerry warned North Korea not to conduct a missile test, saying 
it would be provocation that "will raise people's temperatures" and further 
isolate the country and its impoverished people. He said Sunday that the 
U.S. was "prepared to reach out," but that Pyongyang must first bring 
down tensions and honor previous agreements.Foreign governments have been 
trying to assess how seriously to take North Korea's recent torrent of 
rhetoric warning of war if the U.S. and South Korea do not 
stop holding joint military maneuvers just across the border.The Associated 
Press contributed to this report.
y's vote.He also said he 
could not support any tax cuts in the current legislative session if 
the bill doesn't pass.The Senate immediately adjourned without taking up 
any bill after the House vote. Senate President Michael Lamoureux said other 
pending issues, including a tax cut package and the proposed budget for 
the year, were paused while lawmakers consider the private option."I think 
it puts everything on hold, and probably not much of a chance 
of wrapping up by Friday at this point," said Lamoureux, R-Russellville.Arkansas 
is deciding whether to enact an alternative to the Medicaid expansion that 
was once required under the federal health care law but is now 
a choice left up to individual states after last year's Supreme Court 
ruling.The proposal was a compromise reached between Republican legislative 
leaders and Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe as an alternative to expanding Medicaid 
enrollment. Under the bill, Arkansas would take the federal Medicaid funds 
it would have received to expand the program and instead use that 
money to purchase private insurance for 250,000 residents who make up to 
138 percent of the poverty line, which amounts to $15,415 per year.U.S. 
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has said the state's 
plan was consistent with Medicaid's requirements, but in a letter to Beebe 
this month she stopped short of giving final approval.Some Republican support 
for the "private option" proposal is also linked 


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