[36117] in SIPB IPv6
Blood Pressure Myth Exposed..
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Marine Essentials)
Mon Oct 28 07:35:02 2013
Date: Mon, 28 Oct 2013 04:35:01 -0700
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
From: "Marine Essentials" <MarineEssentials@liamaughcyb.us>
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Blood Pressure Myth Exposed...?
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Shown here are Federal Premium hollow point bullets.APRepublican Rep. Jason
Chaffetz said Thursday that the Department of Homeland Security is using
roughly 1,000 rounds of ammunition more per person than the U.S. Army,
as he and other lawmakers sharply questioned DHS officials on their "massive"
bullet buys."It is entirely ... inexplicable why the Department of Homeland
Security needs so much ammunition," Chaffetz, R-Utah, said at a hearing.The
hearing itself was unusual, as questions about the department's ammunition
purchases until recently had bubbled largely under the radar -- on blogs
and in the occasional news article. But as the Department of Homeland
Security found itself publicly defending the purchases, lawmakers gradually
showed more interest in the issue.Democratic Rep. John Tierney, D-Mass.,
at the opening of the hearing, ridiculed the concerns as "conspiracy theories"
which have "no place" in the committee room.But Republicans said the purchases
raise "serious" questions about waste and accountability.Chaffetz, who chairs
one of the House oversight subcommittees holding the hearing Thursday, revealed
that the department currently has more than 260 million rounds in stock.
He said the department bought more than 103 million rounds in 2012
and used 116 million that same year -- among roughly 70,000 agents.Comparing
that with the small-arms purchases procured by the U.S. Army, he said
the DHS is churning through between 1,300
e younger Bush.People
are perhaps beginning to appreciate that President Bush, for all his Texas
swagger, is a gentleman, Fox News senior political analyst Brit Hume said.I
wish that some of my fellow scholars, particularly historians and law professors
and political scientists, would do what academics are supposed to do, which
is to bide their time, do the actual research before proclaiming a
presidency a failure, said Stephen Knott, a U.S. Naval War College professor
and author of a book about Bush. He described the Bush legacy
as "unfinished."It takes a long time for documents, for oral history interviews,
particularly classified documents, to emerge," Knott said. "And then you
get a fuller, more complete picture of a presidency.Presidential historian
Douglas Brinkley said he wasn't surprised by Bush's rising approval rating.We
pummel presidents when theyre in the White House," said Brinkley, whose
2007 book "The Great Deluge" was critical of Bush's handling of the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. "We give them a hard time. Then they
leave and they write a memoir that becomes an instant bestseller. Journalists
ask softball questions, and then they open up a presidential library. And
people forgive a lot of the mistakes and say, Hey, he brought
our country through some tough times.'"The toughest time for Americans during
Bush's presidency was Sept. 11, 2001, when Al Qaeda hijacked and crashed
four airplanes, killing nearly 3,000 Americ
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> LONDON A British coroner has delivered a verdict of accidental death
in the case of a stowaway who fell from a plane's undercarriage.The
man's body landed in a street in southwest London in September. Months
later he was identified as Jose Matada, 26, of Mozambique.At an inquest
Thursday, police Det. Sgt. Jeremy Allsup said Matada was identified through
a SIM card in his pocket. One number was traced to a
woman whose family had employed him in South Africa.Matada may have been
trying to reach Britain illegally.Pathologist Robert Chapman said Matada
survived most of the flight from Angola, but might have been killed
by hypothermia, lack of oxygen or the plane's landing gear before his
body hit the ground.Coroner Sean Cummings ruled Matada's death an accident.
urprised and pleased, for
instance, when he attended his nephew's high school graduation last year.
There, he saw a gay male graduate with his boyfriend, open and
accepted by all his peers."It's mind-boggling," Benjamin Dreyer says. "It's
wonderful."Carrillo, too, decided to live openly when he arrived at Elmhurst
College. He joined a fraternity and even painted a rainbow
a common symbol of the gay community on
his fraternity paddle. To his surprise, there was some backlash from a
couple of his straight fraternity brothers who feared people would think
their fraternity was the "gay fraternity.""There's a long way to go," says
Carrillo, who graduates next month. But he still feels hopeful."Honestly,
I see it everywhere there's progress."___Martha Irvine is an
AP national writer. She can be reached at mirvine(at)ap.org or at http://twitter.com/irvineap
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