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Mon Jan 6 05:02:24 2014
From: "Match" <Match@sdoliefabysm.us>
Reply-To: <bounce-73800431@sdoliefabysm.us>
Date: Mon, 6 Jan 2014 02:02:22 -0800
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
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Dating News: 1 in 5 Relationships Start Online - Meet Singles Today!
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revented speedy treatment for Hernandez and other victims.TSA
workers at LAX have been wondering the same thing, said Victor Payes,
who works at the airport and is president of the local union."I
basically think there's a lack of coordination between entities at this
airport. That lack of coordination may have led to something that shouldn't
have happened," Payes said. "We may be talking about Officer Hernandez as
a survivor."Representatives for the Los Angeles Police Department, Los Angeles
Fire Department and Los Angeles Airport Police said they couldn't comment
on the ongoing investigation until extensive reports are finished."Authorities
say that Paul Ciancia entered Terminal 3 with a duffel bag, pulled
out an assault rifle and started shooting. They said he had a
note in his bag that said he wanted to "kill TSA" and
that he wanted to stir fear in them, criticizing their searches as
unconstitutional.He was shot by airport police officers four times, in the
mouth and leg, before being taken into custody. He remains in fair
condition at a hospital and his doctors will determine when he's fit
to appear in court.In the chaotic moments after the gunfire began, as
travelers dove to the ground or scrambled for cover in restaurants and
stores, officials worried there could be bombs in the terminal and tried
to determine whether the gunman had any accomplices. In the first 30
minutes, there was also an unfounded report of two suspicious peop
der international supervision.The United States and Russia have been trying
to convene a peace conference in Geneva since May to broker a
political solution to the Syrian conflict that activists say has killed
more than 120,000 people and displaced millions more.Speaking to Assad by
telephone, Russian leader Vladimir Putin "emphasized efforts taken by Russia
together with its partners to prepare a Geneva-2 international conference
and gave a positive assessment of Bashar Assad's readiness to send a
Syrian government delegation there," the Kremlin said.The Syrian government
has said it will take part in the peace talks, although officials
have said they will not talk to armed rebels or members of
the main Syrian opposition group in exile. Its avowed willingness to attend
the Geneva conference coincides with a military offensive that has seen
Assad's forces seize ground near Damascus and in the northern province of
Aleppo.The main Western-backed opposition group, the Syrian National Coalition,
said in a statement Monday it would only attend the Geneva talks
if humanitarian aid is allowed to reach besieged areas and the government
releases political prisoners. The group itself wants any future transitional
government to exclude Assad and his close allies, a demand the Syrian
government has rejected.The Associated Press contributed to this report.Click
here for more from The Telegraph.
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">KIANTONE, N.Y. Authorities say a western New York man has been
charged with harassment for repeatedly firing an unloaded Civil War cannon
at the homes of his neighbors.The Chautauqua County Sheriff's Office says
52-year-old Brian Malta fired the cannon at neighboring homes in the rural
town of Kiantone, on the Pennsylvania border 60 miles south of Buffalo.Deputies
say the cannon was fired with only a powder charge and wadding.
Police confiscated the cannon.Officials say Malta had an ongoing dispute
with his neighbors, but no details were released.Malta was arrested Wednesday
and charged with three counts of harassment and three counts of menacing.
He was released from the county jail after posting $2,500 bail.It couldn't
immediately be determined if Malta had a lawyer.
YAOUNDE, Cameroon A church official in northern Cameroon says the gunmen
who kidnapped a French priest are demanding the release of members of
an armed Islamic group who have been arrested.Fellow priest Gilbert Pali
said Friday that the kidnappers had sent a representative back to the
area to issue their demands.Father Georges Vandenbeusch was kidnapped late
Wednesday in the far north of Cameroon, about 18 miles (30 kilometers)
from the border with Nigeria. The zone has been flagged as a
risk for terrorism and kidnapping, but the priest chose to stay on
to carry out his work, the French Foreign Ministry said.The kidnappers are
seeking the release of prisoners from Boko Haram, a Nigerian extremist group
that has waged a campaign of bombings and shootings across Nigeria's north.
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