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daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Vydox)
Sun Oct 27 07:30:59 2013

From: "Vydox" <Vydox@iisamjuffer.us>
Date: Sun, 27 Oct 2013 04:30:59 -0700
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
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FILE: July 27, 2011 A section of vacant stores in Detroit.APThe bankruptcy 
filing for Detroit marks a final step in the chrome-plated citys decades-long 
decline  which started with the countrys overall manufacturing slowdown 
and continued with the departure of U.S. automakers and residents, leaving 
behind a sprawling city trying to survive on dwindling coffers.Detroit was 
in the 1950s a worldwide hub of auto manufacturing, making it the 
fourth-largest U.S. city with one of the countrys highest per-capita incomes.However, 
the so-called Motor Citys decline started soon after with residents -- following 
their counterparts in other U.S. cities  starting to move to the 
suburbs and take with them businesses, jobs and tax dollars.Historians argue 
the deadly 1967 riot in Detroit, one of the many so-called race 
riots across the country in the 1960s, accelerated the trend.And as the 
population dwindled from roughly 1.8 million to 700,000, city officials 
struggled to keep up with municipal services in the 142-square-mile city, 
with a tax base just half of what it was in the 
1950s.Meanwhile, auto companies began opening plants in other cities as 
Japan-made cars dominated the international market.By 2009, the U.S. auto 
industry collapsed with the entire economy, eventually pulling down Detroit 
with it.The citys efforts to provide and maintain such basic services as 
law enforcement and trash removal were further complicated by the costs 
of paying uni
RAMALLAH, West Bank  Disagreements that blocked Israeli-Palestinian negotiations 
for the past five years have not been fully resolved, despite U.S. 
Secretary of State John Kerry's recent announcement of progress, and there's 
no clear path to a resumption of talks.Palestinian officials said Sunday 
their key demand remains: Ahead of any talks, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin 
Netanyahu must accept Israel's pre-1967 frontier as the starting point for 
drawing the border of a future state of Palestine. They say Kerry's 
renewed endorsement of that frontier as a baseline in closed-door talks 
is not enough, and that they need to hear from Netanyahu himself.It's 
not clear if this amounts to last-minute maneuvering or if the Palestinians 
will walk away if Netanyahu refuses to accept that formula, as he 
has done repeatedly. On Sunday, Netanyahu's right-wing allies were adamant 
that Israel would not budge, and Netanyahu appeared to be trying to 
lower expectations about any future negotiations.Palestinian President Mahmoud 
Abbas is skeptical of Netanyahu's willingness to negotiate in good faith, 
suspecting the Israeli hard-liner is more interested in a peace "process" 
as an antidote to Israel's international isolation than in an actual deal.Abbas 
has strong reasons to return to the table, however, even if it's 
not on his terms.He can ill afford to rebuff the U.S. and 
Europe, the financial backers of his self-rule government, the perpetually 
cash-stra

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">Children walk in a narrow street of the Kasbah of Algiers on 
March 22, 2013, in Algeria. The country's public prosecutor on Sunday demanded 
the death penalty for two men on trial for abducting and murdering 
two boys aged nine and 10, the news agency APS reported.AFP/FileALGIERS 
(AFP)  Algeria's public prosecutor on Sunday demanded the death penalty 
for two men on trial for abducting and murdering two boys aged 
nine and 10, the news agency APS reported.The prosecutor said a third 
man accused of not alerting the police about the kidnapping that occurred 
in March should be handed a life sentence, the national news agency 
said.The boys were strangled to death and their bodies found on Tuesday 
inside plastic shopping bags not far from their home in the city 
of Constantine, east of Algiers.Their brutal death triggered a national 
outcry.Two men were arrested hours after the bodies were found and admitted 
their responsibility, officials have said.The abduction of children in Algeria 
has been on the rise, according to official estimates which indicated that 
31 children were kidnapped in the past year compared to four in 
2008.
 Syrians inspect the site where a barrel bomb dropped by an air 
force helicopter exploded in Saraqeb in northwestern Syria on July 20, 2013.AFP/FileLONDON, 
Greater London (AFP)  British Prime Minister David Cameron said on Sunday 
that the Syrian conflict was "on the wrong trajectory", admitting the Assad 
regime may be getting stronger, and urged more help for opposition forces."It's 
very depressing picture and it's a picture that is, I think, on 
the wrong trajectory," Cameron said in an interview with the BBC.He added: 
"You've got an evil president who's doing dreadful things to his people... 
I think he may be stronger than he was a few months 
ago."But I'd still describe the situation as a stalemate."Cameron said Britain 
had still not decided whether to arm the rebels fighting President Bashar 
al-Assad, but said more could be done to help those who wanted 
a democratic Syria."We do need to do more to help promote those 
parts of the opposition that want a free, pluralistic, democratic Syria," 
he said."We're not arming the rebels. We have made no decision about 
that."It's no good complaining about the rebels if you're not going to 
try and help those that want a free, democratic, pluralistic Syria."And 
that's why we're helping with non-military equipment, we're helping with 
technical assistance and training."The prime minister admitted there was 
"too much extremism" among some of the rebels, but insisted "that's not 
a reason for just pulling
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