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Sat Feb 1 17:04:24 2014
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
From: "Match.com Partner" <Match.comPartner@acalerydbv.us>
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Date: Sat, 1 Feb 2014 14:04:24 -0800
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Dating News: 1 in 5 Relationships Start Online - Meet Singles Today!
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Controversial gun legislation cleared a key Senate hurdle Thursday, as lawmakers
voted 68-31 to start debate on the package which includes expanded background
checks and new penalties for gun trafficking.Senate Democrats, joined by
16 Republicans, were able to overcome an attempted filibuster by GOP senators
opposed to the current bill. Those senators could still slow-walk the debate,
but the Senate will eventually begin votes on amendments -- one of
which is considered crucial to winning support for a final vote.The White
House called Thursday's tally an "important" but "early milestone," as both
sides of the issue prepare for a grueling debate -- one that
is being waged in Washington and on the airwaves. The amendment likely
to be at the front of the line is one from Sens.
Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Pat Toomey, R-Pa., which would scale back the
call for universal background checks. The plan would expand checks to gun-show
and Internet sales, but exempt certain personal transactions.The National
Rifle Association and other gun-rights supporters voiced concern about the
new proposal, saying it still goes too far. But the plan, offered
by two lawmakers who are at the conservative end of their respective
parties, could help ease opposition ahead of a final vote.The legislation
required at least 60 votes to advance Thursday.If the bill ultimately passes
the Senate, it would still have to pass the Republican-dominated House."The
hard work st
last week, under the
rails, in broad daylight, about three in the afternoon," Alvarez said."We
are in deep here," he said. "The police rob as much as
the drug addicts."___Housing is a major problem, and has been a government
priority.An estimated 2 million of Venezuela's country's nearly 30 million
people lack permanent homes, and one of Chavez's anti-poverty "missions"
builds them.But it's been slow going. The government says it has built
370,500 homes and apartments over the past two years, and more than
3 million people applied for them.In the city of Guacara, a stop
between Maracay and Valencia on the unfinished rail line, about 100 women
invaded a fenced-in vacant lot beside a Pirelli tire factory last weekend.Police
cordoned off the lot and, two days later, weren't letting in food
or water to the women, who shielded themselves from the sun under
sheets strung across the limbs of bushes."They give houses to their families
and closest friends," one woman complained about government supporters before
police shooed a reporter away.Sisters Diana, 26, and Laura Rojas, 19, had
joined the squatters but gave up.Single mothers, both yearn for their own
homes. Laura lives cramped with her mother. Diana is tired of putting
most of her earnings from selling bed linens on the street into
a single, rented room."If you don't invade, you don't get your own
home," said Diana, who voted for Chavez in October but wasn't sure
if she would vote at al
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">This undated photo, provided by the victim's family, shows 18-year-old Kelsey
Smith, who was abducted outside a Kansas shopping mall in 2007 and
murdered.This undated photo, provided by the victim's family, shows 18-year-old
Kelsey Smith, who was abducted outside a Kansas shopping mall in 2007
and murdered.When 18-year-old Kelsey Smith was abducted in broad daylight
outside a Kansas shopping mall in 2007, the teen's parents spent four
harrowing days searching for their daughter, whose body was found after
police scoured an area close to a tower where her cellphone last
pinged.But the search for the young woman would have ended much sooner
had Verizon Wireless promptly handed over cellphone records to authorities,
according to Smith's mother as well as a U.S. congressman both
of whom are calling for legislation mandating that all cellphone carriers
provide police with a customer's location information in an emergency.Current
federal law allows cellphone companies to release information to police
in certain situations, but it does not require them to do so.
Kelseys Law seeks to mandate it on the state and ultimately national
level.We want to create a national standard to make it very clear
and easy for law enforcement and families of victims in the case
of an emergency to be able to locate their missing loved one,
Rep. Kevin Yoder, R-Kan., told FoxNews.com. In Kelseys case, they had the
information but they weren't releasing it because t
This undated photo, provided by the victim's family, shows 18-year-old Kelsey
Smith, who was abducted outside a Kansas shopping mall in 2007 and
murdered.This undated photo, provided by the victim's family, shows 18-year-old
Kelsey Smith, who was abducted outside a Kansas shopping mall in 2007
and murdered.When 18-year-old Kelsey Smith was abducted in broad daylight
outside a Kansas shopping mall in 2007, the teen's parents spent four
harrowing days searching for their daughter, whose body was found after
police scoured an area close to a tower where her cellphone last
pinged.But the search for the young woman would have ended much sooner
had Verizon Wireless promptly handed over cellphone records to authorities,
according to Smith's mother as well as a U.S. congressman both
of whom are calling for legislation mandating that all cellphone carriers
provide police with a customer's location information in an emergency.Current
federal law allows cellphone companies to release information to police
in certain situations, but it does not require them to do so.
Kelseys Law seeks to mandate it on the state and ultimately national
level.We want to create a national standard to make it very clear
and easy for law enforcement and families of victims in the case
of an emergency to be able to locate their missing loved one,
Rep. Kevin Yoder, R-Kan., told FoxNews.com. In Kelseys case, they had the
information but they weren't releasing it because t
</p>
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