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Your home is far less likely to be broken into

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Get Light Angel)
Tue Feb 4 19:04:29 2014

Date: Tue, 4 Feb 2014 16:04:28 -0800
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Get Light Angel" <GetLightAngel@thasakskl.us>
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@thasakskl.us>

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Motion sensor outdoor LED light

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es caused 
by across-the-board spending cuts.The White House abruptly retreated under 
pressure last Wednesday when it indicated it would accept an easing of 
the FAA cuts while leaving the balance of the $85 billion in 
reductions unchanged. Given lengthy political struggle surrounding across-the-board 
cuts, the issue was sensitive enough so that when Sens. Susan Collins, 
R-Maine and Mark Udall, D-Colo., initially proposed legislation that explicitly 
said the measure would assure the towers remain open, Senate Majority Leader 
Harry Reid, D-Nev., objected, according to several officials briefed on 
the discussions.The wording was altered to drop the explicit reference, 
although the flexibility to keep the towers open was retained. It was 
not clear whether Reid insisted on his own behalf, as a proxy 
for other Democrats, or on behalf of the White House. But it 
was not the first time the leader has become involved in a 
struggle over the fate of the towers.When the Senate was debating a 
different measure earlier in the year, he quietly prevented Moran from gaining 
a vote on a stand-alone proposal to keep the towers open.A spokesman 
for Reid was not immediately available to comment.Huerta testified recently 
that the cost of cancelling FAA furloughs would be $220 million through 
Sept. 30, leaving about $33 million in freed-up funding to maintain the 
towers. He also said the agency is working with about 50 communities 
and airport operators in hop
in first place. State media reported that Berdymukhamedov 
won the race.The horse also fell, but quickly got up, showing a 
slight limp. Berdymukhamedov, however, lay motionless. Within seconds, several 
dozen men in dark suits and one in traditional garb including a 
high white sheepskin hat rushed onto the track, and an ambulance soon 
arrived.The man who shot the video spoke on condition of anonymity for 
fear that divulging his name could have negative repercussions on his livelihood. 
He said the president reappeared about half an hour later to accept 
the winner's prize   about $11 million.State TV showed the president 
accepting the award, which he said would be used to improve Turkmenistan's 
horse breeding.The choreographed winning of the race    the nearest 
challenger was obviously throttling back his mount in the home stretch  
  the media censorship and the reported tough security response at 
the airport all reflect Turkmenistan's two decades of stifling authoritarianism.Since 
becoming independent in the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, Turkmenistan 
has been an extreme example of a one-party state.Its first leader, Saparmurat 
Niyazov, developed a pervasive personality cult that included renaming months 
of the year after his family members. He also mandated that all 
schoolchildren study his rambling spiritual guide and once claimed that 
reading it three times would guarantee the reader a berth in heaven.Some 
of his measures verged on 

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<strong><center><a href="http://www.thasakskl.us/3983/174/379/1410/2945.10tt71675797AAF13.php"><H3>Motion sensor outdoor LED light</a></H3></strong>
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				<a href="http://www.thasakskl.us/3983/174/379/1410/2945.10tt71675797AAF13.php">Light Angel &mdash; The Motion Activated Stick Up LED Light</a>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">The U.S. has identified the mastermind of the Benghazi attack, sources tell 
Fox News, though the individual apparently is walking free in Libya.The 
confirmation from multiple sources comes more than seven months after the 
assault on two U.S. locations in Benghazi, Libya, where four Americans -- 
including Ambassador Chris Stevens -- were killed. President Obama pledged 
after the attack that "justice will be done."But one source told Fox 
News the government is "sitting on" information."We basically don't want 
to upset anybody, and the problem is, if Ambassador Stevens' family knew 
that we were sitting on information about the people who killed their 
son, their brother, on and on, then, and we could look them 
as a government in the face, then we're messing up. We're messing 
up," the source said.Fox News spoke exclusively with one special operator 
who watched the events unfold in real time and has debriefed those 
who were part of the response. He remains anonymous for his safety 
and has decided to talk because he says he and others connected 
with the Sept. 11, 2012, attacks in Benghazi are frustrated with the 
excuses and lack of a military response since Stevens and three other 
Americans were killed."We have all the capability, all the training, all 
the capacity, to kill and capture not only terrorists involved, with the 
specific events of 9/11, and Ambassador Stevens' death, but terrorists that 
are feeding other regions including Europe th
 LONDON  A British adventurer has died and two others suffered frostbite 
as they tried to cross Greenland's ice cap on a charity hike, 
officials said Wednesday.The British Foreign Office said Philip Goodeve-Docker 
died and two others on the trek remained hospitalized.On Friday, the three-man 
expedition got caught by a strong cold wind that sweeps across the 
eastern part of the vast icecap, Poul Petersen, a spokesman for the 
police in Greenland said. A rescue helicopter was not able to reach 
the men until Saturday because of the bad weather, and on arrival 
they found that Goodeve-Docker was dead.The survivors were flown to Britain 
via Iceland after first being treated at a hospital in Tasiilaq on 
Greenland's east coast, 180 kilometers (112 miles) south of the Arctic Circle, 
Petersen said. Goodeve-Docker's body was being sent later to Britain, he 
said.Goodeve-Docker embarked on the trip to raise money for charity in honor 
of his grandfather, who died two years ago.On his website, he described 
the 500 to 600-kilometer (310 to 370-mile) trek as one of the 
great polar challenges. The adventurer said he expected the trip's dangers 
to include polar bears, strong winds, crevasses up to 500 meters (1,650 
feet) and temperatures as low as minus 50 Celsius (minus 58 Fahrenheit).
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