0
POPSDry skin, also called xerosis, is a common problem. The skin loses moisture and may crack and peel, or become irritated and inflamed. Most dry skin results from environmental factors such as: Winter, summer weather, excessive bathing, low humidity, wind, air conditioning, heating, strong soaps. Dry skin is most common in lower legs, arms, flanks, and thighs.
0
POPSWhitening Teeth Get best teeth whitening Products, professional tooth whitening gel & dental health care products? Have whiter teeth with our new and improved teeth whitening techniques? Smile away beautifully with our teeth whitening products.
2
POPSPure Announces New Flip Camcorder The Flip is a really cool product, simple and convenient and smartly designed. Gadget geeks are eager to see if Pure can repeat its success with the Mino -- and whether $179 is a low-enough price point to attract the members of the "myspace generation" it's being marketed towards.
0
POPSChicago Cops- Or Robbers It is a known fact, not only the "Windy City", but the "City Of Brotherly Love",Philadelphia, New York, the "Big Apple" or is it "Big Horseapple", LALA Land, Los Angeles and countless more are no different. There seems to be a systemic character flaw, provided by "Higher Authorities". Only the naive and uninformed still think, it is just a few bad Horse "Apples, and those who have a vested interest are continuing to cover that kind of rampant fascist violence. It comes from the top down...."Mission Accomplished" rubbish ....at all cost. Lies lies lies and more lies
1
POPSContractor Atrocity--It's Lying ... and It's Murder: How KBR Electrocuted US Troops
"... and marines in Iraq and Afghanistan. These deaths did not come while the soldiers were on patrol or by unexpected encounters with downed "hot" wires. These "accidents" happened in facilities used as base camps for U.S. units, camps that were to have been completely refurbished - including the wiring - under terms of a $30 billion no-bid contract awarded to the one-time Halliburton subsidiary KBR (formerly Kellogg-Brown-Root). The deaths reportedly all were the result of shoddy workmanship in the grounding of electrical sources, both in permanent structures and in machinery when in use. The problem is not new: in 2004, Army units in theatre were alerted concerning the potential for accidental electrocution. American electricians working for KBR in the war zone observed and notified KBR and even the Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA), the office that monitors contractor performance, of numerous instances of poor workmanship by undertrained and underpaid Iraqi and Afghan "e