[7853] in linux-announce channel archive
linuxch-announce.discuss, can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Heart Attack Fighter)
Thu Sep 5 11:04:47 2013
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Heart Attack Fighter" <HeartAttackFighter@noggviscopas.com>
Date: Thu, 5 Sep 2013 08:04:45 -0700
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Can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?
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FBI agents on Friday visited the suburban Washington home of former CIA
Director David Petraeus, who resigned last year after revelations about
an extra-marital affair, according to several news reports.An FBI spokeswoman
told Fox News on Saturday she could confirm only that there was
"law enforcement activity in Northern Virginia."Agents went to Petraeus
home to interview him, but it's not clear whether he was home,
according to USA Today.Officials are saying the visit is part of the
ongoing investigation into allegations that Paula Broadwell, with whom Petraeus
had the affair, improperly received or stored classified documents while
writing his biography, sources told NBC.Agents have also visited Broadwells
home in Charlotte, N.C., that she share with her husband and two
children.The affair was exposed in November as part of an investigation
into threatening emails Broadwell, 40, purportedly sent other women, Tampa,
Fla., socialite Jill Kelley. Petraeus, 60, resigned weeks later and publically
apologized earlier this month.
a
local university. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)The Associated PressIn this March
27, 2013 photo, Cassie Quinlan, 69, poses for a photo in her
Concord, Mass., home. Almost 40 years ago, Quinlan drove one of the
Boston public school buses that took black students from the citys Roxbury
neighborhood to a predominantly white high school in Charlestown. She said
that dozens of white protesters would line the curb and police would
have to make a wall at the bus door so black students
could get into school. Quinlan said her experiences opened her own eyes
to black culture, and she became the first white member of a
black gospel choir at a local university. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)The Associated
PressIn this 1974 file photo, police guard while black students board a
school bus as Boston begins a school busing program. The nonprofit Union
of Minority Neighborhoods is hosting a group of exercises across Boston
in 2013, where participants talk about how the citys busing crisis impacted
them in the 1970s. Organizers hope it will unite people to fight
for better access to quality public schools for all students, even as
another new Boston school assignment system starts. (AP Photo/Peter Bregg,
File)The Associated PressBOSTON Last fall, Ginnette Powell traveled from
her home in Boston's Dorchester section to her old middle school in
South Boston a journey of just two miles, but one
that covered a huge emotional distance. Finally, she was able to le
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<strong><center><a href="http://www.noggviscopas.com/2140/127/264/1099/2351.10tt71675797AAF9.php"><H3>Can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">a 60-year-old African-American, was a young teacher at the beginning
of the busing crisis. Later, he worked as a union organizer.He was
among several others, including Cassie Quinlan and Kevin Davis, who participated
in the story circle with Powell.Lynn said a white police officer once
put a gun to his head and accused him of stealing a
white child's bicycle after officers stopped him in a mostly white neighborhood.
But when police found out he was a teacher, he said, they
apologized and returned his bicycle.He views the busing conflict as a struggle
between people of different classes, not just races, and said he had
the protection of whites as he lobbied for unions in South Boston
in the same era.Quinlan, who is white, drove one of the buses
that took black students from the city's Roxbury section to high school
in Charlestown. When she pulled up to the curb with a police
escort, at least 100 white protesters would be lined up. Police would
have to make a wall at the bus door so students could
get into school."The black kids, they were nervous ...," said Quinlan, now
69. "I used to wish that somebody would smile and wave good
morning. No, there was none of that."Quinlan recalled returning to Charlestown
in the early 1980s for a field trip. Then, she saw students
of all races mixing together."I cried when I drove away, when I
saw this, how much change had happened," she said.Quinlan said her experiences
opened her own eyes to black c
city,
origins or previous ownership history," she wrote.On Friday, The Washington
Post reported that Fuqua's 84-year-old mother, who operated an art school
for decades in Fairfax County under the name Marcia Fouquet, is an
artist who specialized in reproducing paintings from Renoir and other masters.
The Post said Fouquet had artistic links to Baltimore in the 1950s,
when the painting was stolen, and graduated from Goucher College with a
fine arts degree in 1952.A man who identified himself as Fuqua's brother,
Owen M. Fuqua, told the Post that the painting had been in
the family for 50 or 60 years and that "all I know
is my sister didn't just go buy it at a flea market."The
man later retracted his story, and ultimately said it was another person
using his name who gave the initial interview.Efforts by the AP Friday
to reach Martha and Owen Fuqua Friday were unsuccessful. Martha Fuqua's
lawyer did not return a call Friday seeking comment.The FBI has an
ongoing investigation, according to spokeswoman Lindsay Godwin.Meanwhile,
U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema ordered all parties seeking to claim
ownership of the painting to make their case in written pleadings later
this month.
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