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AP MIAMI - Sandra Pico is poor, but not poor enough.She makes about $15,000 a year, supporting her daughter and unemployed husband. She thought she d be able to get health insurance after the Supreme Court upheld President Barack Obama s health care law.Then she heard that her own governor won t agree to the federal plan to extend Medicaid coverage to people like her in two years. So she expects to remain uninsured, struggling to pay for her blood pressure medicine. You fall through the cracks and there s nothing you can do about it, said the 52-ye
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stanley cup canada , my dream in my homeland is not being accomplished. Many working parents like Pico are below the federal poverty line but don t qualify for Medicaid, a decades-old state-federal insurance program. That s especially true in states where conservative governors say they ll reject the Medicaid expansion under Obama s health law.In South Carolina, a yearly income of $16,900 is too much for Medicaid for a family of three. In Florida, $11,000 a year is too much. In Mississippi, $8,200 a year is too much. In Louisiana and Texas, earning more than just $5,000 a year makes you ineligible for Medicaid. Governors in those five states have said they ll reject the Medicaid expansion underpinning Obama s health law after the Supreme Court s decision gave states that option. They favor small government and say they can t afford the added cost to their states Olar Border Patrol Agent Gunned Down in Arizona
George Washington Carver is perhaps best known for his work on peanut cultivation, but his botanical research was far more wide-ranging than the one legume for which he ;d eventually become famous. Agriculture in the Reconstruction-era American South had an over-reliance on cotton. Cultivating the same plant in the same places over and over again leads to a degradation in soil quality. Add an infestation by the boll weevil, and cotton growers had a problem. It was to introduce some agricultural diversity that Carver eventually advocated for peanuts. But when he was an undergraduate and then masters student at Iowa State University, he worked on a wider ran
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http://cdm16001.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15031coll7/id/287 Unlike many modern scientific papers, the writing is both beautiful
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