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Lantern provides a brighter, whiter light that fills the whole room

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Olde Brooklyn Lantern Features)
Fri Jan 31 17:34:23 2014

To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
From: "Olde Brooklyn Lantern Features" <OldeBrooklynLanternFeatures@safireplrtw.us>
Reply-To: <bounce-73800431@safireplrtw.us>
Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2014 14:34:24 -0800

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Lantern with 9 LED bulbs shines for up to 100,000 hours

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Reports that the suspects in the Boston bombing are believed to be 
from the region near Chechnya may have caught some by surprise -- 
rebels in Chechnya are known for their violent and long-running campaign 
to break away from Russia, but not for exporting terror to America.But 
congressional researchers and foreign policy analysts have long tracked 
a connection between the Chechnya region and Islamic extremists sympathizing 
with Al Qaeda and the Taliban. If the suspects are indeed Chechen, 
analysts told Fox News they may represent part of a jihadi network 
which has made its way to American soil."The Chechen jihadi network is 
very extensive," Middle East analyst Walid Phares said Friday. "They have 
a huge network inside Russia and Chechnya."John Bolton, former U.S. ambassador 
to the United Nations, said Chechen rebels are motivated by two things 
-- a desire for independence from Russia and Islamic radicalism. He speculated 
that, if the suspects are Chechen, they could be motivated more by 
the latter. "They could well be supported by a significant international 
network," he said.One suspect is dead and another is on the loose, 
as federal and local law enforcement are engaged in what Massachusetts Gov. 
Deval Patrick called a "massive manhunt." Many questions are still unanswered.Sources 
said authorities are investigating whether Dzhokhar A. Tsarnaev, 19, of 
Cambridge, Mass., and his brother may have had military training overseas.Reports 
hav
around. Lydia 
Zimmerman told KWTX-TV that she, her husband and daughter were in their 
garden in Bynum  13 miles from West  when they heard 
multiple blasts."It sounded like three bombs going off very close to us," 
she said.Lucy Nashed, a spokesman for Perry's office, said personnel from 
several agencies were en route to West or already there, including the 
Texas Commission for Environmental Quality, the state's emergency management 
department and an incident management team. Also responding is the state's 
top urban search and rescue team, the state health department and mobile 
medical units.The U.S. Chemical Safety Board said it was deploying a large 
investigation team to West. American Red Cross crews from across Texas also 
headed to the scene. Red Cross spokeswoman Anita Foster said the group 
was working with emergency management officials in West to find a safe 
shelter for residents displaced from their homes.Swanton said he had no 
details on the number of people who work at the plant, which 
was cited by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality in 2006 for 
failing to obtain or to qualify for a permit. The agency acted 
after receiving a complaint in June of that year of a strong 
ammonia smell.In 2001, an explosion at a chemical and fertilizer plant killed 
31 people and injured more than 2,000 in Toulouse, France. The blast 
occurred in a hangar containing 300 tons of ammonium nitrate, which can 
be used for both fertilizer and exp

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">ng it to the long 
run when things often balance out.It's better to use a system similar 
to what economists call "comparative advantage," where each of you is responsible 
for what you're best at, relative to other tasks. You might handle 
all the bills, grocery shopping, and laundry, while your spouse sweeps and 
mops and fixes things when they break. Some weeks, you'll end up 
doing more, other times it might be 75/25 in his favorbut you 
don't keep track because if your husband handled the grocery shopping, you 
might end up with a pantry full of Tostitos.2. Waiting until you're 
in the mood to have sex. Unless you're both extremely hot and 
share an obsessive addiction to monogamous sex, odds are you're not in 
the mood as often as you were when you first met. So 
if you wait 'til you're turned on, months might go by before 
it occurs to you that maybe sex would be a fun thing 
to do.The economist George Loewenstein developed a theory called the hot-cold 
empathy gap, which says we have two selves: a cold, clear-headed rational 
self that might say, "I will have sex with my husband when 
I come home tonight because I love him, and I will enjoy 
it and heck, it's good for my marriage;" and a hot, impulsive, 
emotion-driven, irrational self that says, when the time actually comes, 
"I've had such a bad day, I feel fat and bloated, my 
husband is annoying tonight...No way am I having sex. I'm going to 
watch the Real Housewives and go to bed."When the 
  The 2010 report said lands like Chechnya -- as well as 
Pakistan and Somalia -- are seen by "jihadi theoreticians" as places where 
"fighting is not only legitimate but also compulsory." The same report also 
noted Chechen rebel leader Doku Umarov has tried to align the insurgency 
"with the global jihadist narrative," supporting the establishment of an 
"Islamic emirate in the Caucasus."Whether Chechens, however, have actually 
gone to the frontlines in Afghanistan and Pakistan is a matter of 
fierce dispute. A Congressional Research Service report earlier this year 
said "some Chechen fighters fighting alongside Taliban/Al Qaeda forces have 
been captured or killed."But other studies have sharply questioned this 
kind of reporting, claiming that American officials and media were buying 
into a Russian narrative that Moscow was simply fighting Islamic terrorists 
in Chechnya.A 2004 report from University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth 
professor Brian Glyn Williams described a more complicated picture."While 
it is certainly possible that Chechen individuals made their way to Afghanistan 
to fight for the Taliban in Afghanistan, the complete absence of even 
a single Chechen POW among the thousands captured by the Northern Alliance 
and the U.S. would clearly refute the wild claims that the Chechens 
formed the 'largest contingent of Al Qaeda's foreign legion'," he wrote.Williams 
told FoxNews.com, rather, that "there's a jihad element that has grown large
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