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MethrenRaf

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 Tobacco companies are hoping to cast doubt on a central argument of a class-action suit filed against them  151; that diagnostic medical tests are needed to help protect healthy smokers from disea stanley cup se.Cigarette companies were expected to  stanley cup begin their arguments Thursday in a lawsuit that accuses them of making a defective product and ignoring the health of West Virginia smokers.The suit seeks free diagnostic tests for 250,000 smokers in the state. The class members in the suit are people who have smoked the equivalent of a pack a day for at least five years, but who are not sick.Duke University radiologist Dr. Phillip Goodman was set to testify Thursday. He was expected to back up the tobacco companies  claim that the medical screening program would have little benefit and could create harm by triggering invasive, unnecessary follow-up tests.The lawsuit is the first class-action medical monitoring case against the major tobacco companies to be tried i stanley termoska n the United States. The suit, essentially a liability claim, was filed against R.J. Reynolds, Philip Morris, Brown  Williamson and Lorillard.        The suit seeks to force the companies to pay for a lung-function test called spirometry for all symptom-free smokers at age 40, with a second test at age 45 and tests every two years after that.Starting at age 50, healthy smokers also would get spiral computed tomography scans, which generate three-dimensional images of organs and potentially reveal disease earlier than other test Mfuk The real reason you should be concerned about   8220;Planet Hillary  8221;
 Anyone who has spent more than 10 minutes watching C-Span   stanley mugs before falling asleep  knows that passing laws can be a drawn out, excruciating process. This data vis tool called the Legislative Explorer reveals exactly how insane this process can really be.     Created by researchers at the University of Washington   Center for American Politics and Public Policy, the Legislative Explorer shows you data about the journeys taken by 250,000 bills and resolutions introduced from 1973 to the present. When most of us think about the legislative process, that classic Schoolhouse Rock video pops into our heads. But the process that bill takes is a gentle ride compared to what most experience. Each dot represents a bill, so you can follow its movement through the legislative version of Chutes  038; Ladders. Focusing on just one bill鈥攑articularly a signif stanley cup icant one鈥攇ives you a unique, sped-up perspective of the wheeling and dealing that tak stanley sverige es place in Congress.  The progress of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 is captured in the video above. The bill  represented by a blue dot  was introduced by House Financial Services Committee chairman Barney Frank  on December 2, 2009, and simultaneously referred to several House committees. After passing the House on Dec. 11, it was referred to just one Senate Committee  Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs  chaired by Christopher Dodd. The bill was then passed by the Senate on May 20 before ping ponging back