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Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Testoril)
Sun Feb 2 07:04:33 2014

Date: Sun, 2 Feb 2014 04:04:33 -0800
From: "Testoril" <Testoril@mnevurari.us>
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu

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Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight!

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ring peak periods.Coburn claimed the FAA has failed to make 
"smart cuts" to avoid this outcome. He suggested the agency could reduce 
spending on "consultants, supplies and travel" by 15 percent, saving $105 
million. He also claimed the agency could save much more than that 
by trimming a grant program for airport improvements.Huerta said Thursday 
the furloughs were necessary.Likewise, the agency sees no way around closing 
149 air traffic control towers at small airports that are currently operated 
under contract for the FAA, Huerta told the Senate Appropriations Committee's 
transportation subcommittee. The tower closings have been delayed until 
June 15.The furloughs and tower closings were designed "to minimize impacts 
on the maximum number of travelers," he said. But he acknowledged, "We're 
forced to choose between very unattractive options."Another Republican lawmaker 
accused the White House of deliberately trying to upset the public."They 
want to cause the most pain to the American people out there 
so they will put pressure on Congress to back away from sequestration 
(spending cuts)," Rep. Bill Shuster of Pennsylvania told a transportation 
gathering hosted by the National Journal news magazine. Shuster chairs the 
House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee."I believe he (President 
Barack Obama) is instructing his agencies to do things that inflict the 
most pain on the most people. This should be laid right at 
the president's fee
t," Shuster said.The FAA's 47,000 employees -- including 
nearly 15,000 controllers -- are scheduled for one furlough day every other 
week through Sept. 30. That will reduce the number of controller hours 
on duty and pay by 10 percent, Huerta said.In order to maintain 
safety with fewer controllers, takeoffs and landings will have to be less 
frequent, and planes will have to be spaced farther apart when they 
are in the air, he said. That reduces the efficiency of the 
air traffic system, creating delays, he said.The impacts may differ depending 
upon the airport, Huerta said.The employee furloughs will save an estimated 
$200 million, and the tower closings will save $25 million, Huerta said.The 
Associated Press contributed to this report.

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">d it pursued damages in the case.But, according 
to the report, the Justice Department stayed away from that case in 
order to get the city to drop an appeal to the Supreme 
Court on another matter. The department was allegedly concerned that the 
high court, in the course of reviewing that case, would strike down 
a major element of civil rights enforcement.The case the Justice Department 
was allegedly concerned about was St. Paul's appeal on a case in 
which property owners said the city made extraordinary efforts, through 
strict code enforcement, to condemn their properties. The owners said reducing 
the amount of affordable housing for minorities violated the federal Fair 
Housing Act -- by what is known as "disparate impact."Perez appeared to 
think the Supreme Court overturning the case would have been a severe 
blow to civil rights enforcement, the report concluded.The "disparate impact" 
provision, which the report described as legally questionable, prohibits 
housing policies that end up discriminating against certain groups even 
if those policies are not blatantly discriminatory.Perez acknowledged Thursday 
that he thought that case "was a poor vehicle for the Supreme 
Court to address the broad issue."Asked why he intervened, he said "The 
Department of Justice is really a guardian of the Fair Housing Act."Alexander 
retorted: "Well, the Department of Justice is a guardian of taxpayers as 
well."But Perez noted that the value of a losing case
 GUATEMALA CITY  Judges presiding over the landmark genocide trial of a 
former dictator have asked the Constitutional Court to decide if it should 
continue.Tribunal president Yasmin Barrios says judges overseeing the trial 
 won't accept another judge's ruling that the case should start over, 
at a point before charges were filed against Efrain Rios Montt.  
The Constitutional Court has 10 days to rule on the dispute.The trial 
had been nearing closing arguments and U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said 
Friday that the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay is 
concerned over the suspensin.Nesirky says it "is a blow to the numerous 
victims of the atrocities committed during Guatemala's civil war."Rios Montt 
is accused in the killing of 1,771 indigenous people after taking power 
in a 1982 coup.
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