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yarg Hudson Appeals For Nephew s Safe Return
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 WASHINGTON - The first baby boomers will be old enough to qualify for Medicare Jan. 1, and many fear the program s obituary will be written before their own.A new Associated Press-GfK poll finds that baby boomers believe by a ratio of 2-to-1 they won t be able to rely on the giant health insurance plan throughout their retirement.The boomers took a running dive into adolescence and went on to redefine work and family, but getti stanley cup canada ng old is making them nervous.Now, forty-three percent say they don t expect to be able to depend on Medicare forever, while only 20 percent think their Medicare is secure. The rest have mixed feelings.CBS News/USA Today Series: Senior Moment        Yet the survey also shows a surprising willingness among adults of all ages to sacrifice to preserve Medicare benefits that most Americans say they deserve after years of paying taxes into the system at work.Take the contentious issue of Medicare s eligibility age, fixed at 65, while the qualifying age for Social Security is rising gradually to 67.Initially, 63 percent of boomers in the poll dismissed the idea of raising the eligibility age to keep Medicare afloat financially. But when the survey forced them to choose between raising t stanley mug he age or cutting benefits, 59 percent said raise the age and keep the benefits. I don t mind the fact that people may have to work a little longer,  stanley cup  said Lynn Barlow, 60, a real estate agent who lives outside Atlanta. Especially if there s time to plan, laboring a few extra ye Wzkw 鈥婭s Batman V. Superman The Right Way To Start The DC Movie-Verse
 Ever since the first human genome was decoded at a cost of $3 billion, scientists have been pushing for  stanley cups uk a moonshot goal: a system that can process thousands of genomes at a cost of $1,000 each. Today, Illumina unveiled a set of machines that do just that. For geneticists and medical researchers, this is a watershed moment.     Illumina   HiSeq X Ten system offers biomedical research institutes a set of 10 machines that work together to process over 18,000 human genome samples a year, at a cost of $1,000 per sample. That   one-tenth the cost per sample of current techniq stanley cup u stanley thermos mug es, and a huge reduction in the time spent on each sample. It   hard to overstate the importance of this development in the world of research science and population health. Entire books have been written on how inexpensive genome sequencing will change the face of medicine. This isn ;t junk science mail-order genetic testing; the ability to rapidly, cheaply compile population-level genetic information is our key to understanding the genetic basis for diseases like cancer, diabetes and heart disease.  https://gizmodo/23andme-must-stop-selling-dna-tests-says-fda-1471147978 Naturally, this technology is aimed far above the average consumer   head: among the first HiSeq X Ten customers is Harvard and MIT   Broad Institute, a nonprofit biomedical and genomic research organization with a $400 million endowment. But the benefits of this technology touch everyone, healthy or not. Dec