[38840] in SIPB IPv6
No more pills or capsules to swallow
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Slim Spray)
Fri Jan 24 05:00:56 2014
Date: Fri, 24 Jan 2014 02:00:54 -0800
From: "Slim Spray" <SlimSpray@trewenok.us>
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
Envelope-to: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
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As seen on ABC's Shark Tank
http://www.trewenok.us/3842/194/443/1562/3233.10tt73800431AAF17.php
Unsub- http://www.trewenok.us/3842/194/443/1562/3233.10tt73800431AAF10.html
Cities.com
that he was so concerned about Rizzi that even before the protest
took place, he was ready to offer to get off the plane,
rent a car and drive Rizzi and Doxy to New York. Fellow
passenger Frank Ohlhorst told WPVI-TV, which first reported the encounter,
that Rizzi wasn't being disruptive."We were like, 'Why is this happening?
He's not a problem. What is going on?'" said Ohlhorst.Landau told the
AP that crews are very familiar with the protocol for service animals,
but that the airline is reviewing how the situation was handled.Rizzi said
he later learned there had been open seats on the plane. "She
never tried to move me or anybody else to secure the aircraft
the way she said needed to be secured," Rizzi said of the
flight attendant.He told MyFoxTwinCities.com that he was grateful other
passengers supported him."When I heard those people coming off the plane
saying what they said, I felt like a million dollars and more
humble than I have ever felt in my entire life," Rizzi said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.Click here for more from
MyFoxTwinCities.com.A US Airways Express flight from Philadelphia to Long
Island was canceled after passengers rallied behind a blind man who was
removed from the flight after his service dog became restless.
ort.The U.S. military looking to both help an ally
and show its commitment to remaining the leading power in the Pacific
amid the rise of China has been extremely fast
in responding to the disaster.About a half dozen countries
including Japan, Indonesia, and Singapore have offered military assistance
to Manila, and many more have sent supplies. Chinese troops, however, have
been prominently absent, in large part because of a territorial spat between
the two nations.According to Lt. Col. Rodney Legowski, the first U.S. Marines
arrived in the Philippines in response to the disaster within six hours,
and began flying supplies to affected areas less than 18 hours after
that. By Friday, there were 400 Marines in the country.The USS George
Washington aircraft carrier and its battle group are also in place off
the hard-hit islands of Leyte and Samar. So far, the U.S. military
has moved 174,000 kilograms (190 tons) of supplies and flown nearly 200
sorties."Having the U.S. military here is a game changer," said Col. Miguel
Okol, a spokesman for the Philippine air force. "For countries that we
don't have these kinds of relationships with, it can take a while
to get help. But with the U.S., it's immediate."With roughly 600,000 people
displaced by the typhoon and millions still in need of aid, the
Marines said in a statement Thursday that about 900 more Marines based
on Okinawa, Japan, were to arrive early next week aboard two U.S.
Na
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<strong><center><a href="http://www.trewenok.us/3842/194/443/1562/3233.10tt73800431AAF11.php"><H3>As seen on ABC's Shark Tank </a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">Where did all the water go?Billions of years ago when the Red
Planet was young, it likely had a thick atmosphere that was warm
enough to support oceans of liquid water, a critical ingredient for life,
NASA believes. Mars today is a barren desert however -- so what
happened?NASA aims to solve a piece of that puzzle with the launch
of the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission, which is
set to blast off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station's Complex 41
on Monday, Nov. 18 at 1:28 p.m.The newest Mars explorer will study
the thinning of the planet's atmosphere and the disappearance of surface
water over time to possibly explain the discrepancy between then and now.There
are currently several competing theories to explain how Mars was stripped
of its thick atmosphere some 4 billion years ago, the space agency
said."The leading theory is that Mars lost its intrinsic magnetic field
that was protecting the atmosphere from direct erosion by the impact of
the solar wind," said Joseph Grebowsky of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
in Greenbelt, Md.The solar wind is a thin stream of electrically charged
particles or plasma blowing continuously from the sun into space at about
a million miles per hour."Studies of the remnant magnetic field distributions
measured by NASA's Mars Global Surveyor mission set the disappearance of
the planet's convection-produced global magnetic field at about 3.7 billion
years ago, leaving the Red Planet
Cities.com
that he was so concerned about Rizzi that even before the protest
took place, he was ready to offer to get off the plane,
rent a car and drive Rizzi and Doxy to New York. Fellow
passenger Frank Ohlhorst told WPVI-TV, which first reported the encounter,
that Rizzi wasn't being disruptive."We were like, 'Why is this happening?
He's not a problem. What is going on?'" said Ohlhorst.Landau told the
AP that crews are very familiar with the protocol for service animals,
but that the airline is reviewing how the situation was handled.Rizzi said
he later learned there had been open seats on the plane. "She
never tried to move me or anybody else to secure the aircraft
the way she said needed to be secured," Rizzi said of the
flight attendant.He told MyFoxTwinCities.com that he was grateful other
passengers supported him."When I heard those people coming off the plane
saying what they said, I felt like a million dollars and more
humble than I have ever felt in my entire life," Rizzi said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.Click here for more from
MyFoxTwinCities.com.A US Airways Express flight from Philadelphia to Long
Island was canceled after passengers rallied behind a blind man who was
removed from the flight after his service dog became restless.
</p>
</html>
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