[39106] in SIPB IPv6
Find Someone Special on Match!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Match.com)
Sun Feb 9 17:04:29 2014
From: "Match.com" <Match.com@emerybeuk.us>
Reply-To: <bounce-73800431@emerybeuk.us>
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
Date: Sun, 9 Feb 2014 14:04:28 -0800
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Dating News: 1 in 5 Relationships Start Online - Meet Singles Today!
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August 22, 2013: Former New England Patriot football player Aaron Hernandez,
listens to proceedings in a court in Attleboro, Mass. Hernandez was indicted
on first-degree murder and weapons charges in the death of a friend
whose bullet-riddled body was found in an industrial park about a mile
from the ex-player's home. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)Former New England Patriot
Aaron Hernandez used "coded messages" to communicate about his murder case
in jailhouse phone calls, Massachusetts prosecutors said in a request for
access to recordings of his calls.In the calls, Hernandez discussed the
murder of Odin Lloyd, including his "belief about his criminal liability"
and the "extent of his control over persons charged as accessories," according
to the request filed Thursday in Fall River Superior Court.The ex-player
also talked about other matters related to his co-defendants' "whereabouts
and likely criminal liability," the motion says.Hernandez, 24, has pleaded
not guilty in the killing of Lloyd, a 27-year-old Boston man who
played semi-professional football and was dating the sister of Hernandez's
fiancee.Two associates said to be with Hernandez and Lloyd on the night
of the killing Ernest Wallace and Carlos Ortiz have pleaded
not guilty to charges of accessory after the fact.Defense attorneys didn't
immediately respond to messages seeking comment.Inmates are notified that
their calls, except those with their lawyer, are recorded and the conte
associated with a certain random identifier buys cat food regularly,
likes action movies, and visits a Baskin-Robbins a little too frequently
not that it's you, John W. Smith, doing it al;.That said,
let's look at the new systems, and I'll tell you how to
opt out.Neither company goes out of its way to make this easier.
(Details on the new Android ad tracker, incidentally, were broken by USA
Today's Alistair Barr.) Removing them or resetting them takes a bit of
work.If you're an iPhone user, you need to go into Settings, then
click Privacy, and then scroll all the way down to Advertising. You'll
see a button labeled says, "Limit ad tracking." If it's not showing
a green color, click the button so that it shows green. This
will stop ad companies from tracking what you do with your phone
and serving up targeted ads.Right underneath that, incidentally, you'll
see the "Reset Advertising Identifier." Clicking on that will zero out the
anonymized identifier as relates your personal data. To trackers, you will
then appear to be a new user.Now let's go to Android. The
new Google "AdID" system has similar intents and is similarly difficult
to find. Here, you don't go to your Android phone settings, but
your Google Settings app.Look for the Ads link. There, as with the
iPhone, you'll be able both to reset your advertising ID and click
on a box to "opt out of interest based ads."Now let's go
back to what I mentioned above. Most of the Internet
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<strong><center><a href="http://www.emerybeuk.us/4065/107/216/996/1980.10tt73800431AAF19.php"><H3>Dating News: 1 in 5 Relationships Start Online - Meet Singles Today!</a></H3></strong>
<td colspan='2' align='center' valign='middle' class='preview-mid'><br><center><a href="http://www.emerybeuk.us/4065/107/216/996/1980.10tt73800431AAF19.php"><img src="http://www.emerybeuk.us/4065/107/216/73800431/996.1980/img010721643.jpg" border=0 alt=""></a></center> <div align="center"><font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="1"><br><a href="http://www.emerybeuk.us/4065/107/216/996/1980.10tt73800431AAF3.html"><font color="#666666">Update Preferences</font></a><br><br> Match.com | P.O. Box 25472 | Dallas, TX 75225 </font></td></td></tr></table>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">An Alabama neurosurgeon was at Brookwood Medical Center when he was needed
six miles away for emergency brain surgery at Trinity Medical Center.Dr.
Zenko Hrynkiw set off in his car but a rare snowstorm locked
down traffic and he didnt get farther than a few blocks.Dressed in
his hospital scrubs, the 62-year-old got out of his car and walked
the rest of the trip in freezing temperatures.He had a 90 percent
chance of death, Hrynkiw said of the patient who had gone unconscious.Hrynkim
said that if the patient did not have surgery he would have
died, and thats not going to happen on my shift.Hrynkiw, Trinitys only
brain surgeon told reporters that the trip really wasnt that big of
a deal, according to AL.com.It was kind of a nice day for
a walk, he said, describing the trip as kind of a fun
journey.Steve Davis, the charge nurse in the neuro intensive care unit at
Trinity had alerted authorities that Hrynkiw was walking.The police were
looking for him, said Davis, but despite supposed sightings couldnt locate
him and didn't make contact with him until hours later.He finally called
me and said, Wheres the patient? Whats the status? Davis said.He spoke
to the family and went off to surgery. The patient is reported
to be doing well.The extreme weather Tuesday has been blamed for five
deaths in Alabama and it stranded untold thousands away from their homes.Click
for more from AL.com.The Associated Press contribute to this report.Vehicles
backe
Jan. 31: Lidianette Carmona, behind right, the wife of the late boxer
Christopher Rivera, stands with Rivera's family as they pose for photos
taken by fans with Rivera's body propped up in a fake boxing
ring during his wake at the community recreation center within the public
housing project where he lived in San Juan, Puerto Rico.APSAN JUAN, Puerto
Rico Even in death, Christopher Rivera Amaro almost looked ready to
box, leaning against the corner of a simulated ring.Mourners who came to
his wake in San Juan on Friday found him posed afoot, a
yellow hood on his head, sunglasses glasses over his eyes and blue
boxing gloves on his hands.Elsie Rodriguez, vice president of the Marin
Funeral Home, said Rivera's family wanted to stress his boxing. The funeral
home suggested posing him in a ring.The makeshift ring was set up
in a community center of a public housing complex. Rodriguez told The
Associated Press it took them several hours to create the scene.The funeral
home has staged similar wakes for others. One featured a deceased man
riding his motorcycle.The 23-year-old Rivera had a 5-15 record in the 130-pound
weight class. Police said he was shot dead Sunday in the city
of Santurce. No one has been arrested.
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