[55487] in SIPB IPv6
New Approach to Managing yourDiabetes!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (HarvardDept.)
Tue Jun 2 21:22:14 2015
Date: Tue, 2 Jun 2015 18:22:10 -0700
To: <sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu>
From: "HarvardDept." <HarvardDept.@densiveness.work>
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New approach.
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an enthusiasm with a number of people that's very exciting to watch,"
Romney said.By the next debate, sponsored by Fox News, the goodwill seemed
to dissipate, as Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann ripped into Paul over his
foreign policy views.As Paul rises in the Iowa polls, the candidates have
even less reason to be gracious toward him.The RealClearPolitics average of recent
polls shows Paul leading the field in Iowa by about 2 percentage
points. Recent polls generally have him trading the lead with Romney --
while Gingrich, who used to maintain a double-digit lead in Iowa, falls
back to third place.Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center
for Politics, suggested the dynamic in the Iowa race is becoming clear."You've
got a battle for first place between just two candidates -- Romney
and Ron Paul," he said Wednesday on Fox News.Most of the GOP
candidates are now aggressively courting Iowa caucus-goers. Paul is set to travel
from a town hall in
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sent to the blaze in Stamford likely will take it personally
that they were unable to save the five family members."Their desire was
to get that family out and they were unable to. Totally understandable
raging fire, people trapped inside. Sometimes the challenges are
too big and it becomes personal at that point," he said."They feel
this, they're going to feel this," he added. "It is our belief
that every fire can be prevented and that no one should lose
their life to fire. When that happens, we try to figure out
why."Olshanski said the firefighters probably will feel a wide range of emotion.
"There will be sadness, there will be grief," he said, adding how
some might wonder if they could have done something more, or something
different, to save the family.It is common for firefighters in these situations,
Olshanski said, to go through a critical incident stress debriefing. He said
it's important because they're going to have to go on similar calls
in t
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Syrian border to the Iranian border, is one of Iraq's most nagging
post-Saddam era problems. American forces for years acted as a buffer between
the Kurds and Arabs in the area by building partnerships between Iraqi
army forces and their Kurdish counterparts known as the peshmerga. But after
the U.S. troops' withdrawal, officials warn violence could flare there.Parliament speaker Osama
al-Nujaifi, a Sunni Arab nationalist from Ninevah and an outspoken opponent to
Kurdish land ambitions, called the granting of the exploration blocs an "unacceptable
violation" of Ninevah's administrative boundaries and demanded it be annulled. Opposition to
the Kurds' moves is one of the few things that unite Sunni
Arabs and the Shiite parties that dominate the Baghdad government.A day earlier,
a Ninevah provincial delegation to Baghdad files an official complaint to the
government, according to provincial councilman Abdul-Rahim al-Shimmari.Baghdad and the Kurdish government have
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t through. Ibrahim said her family, from the conservative southern Egyptian city
of Sohag, was supportive of her going public."I was devastated," she told
the private ONTV network. "I was hurt, and sad, and didn't expect
that from them (soldiers.) The first thing dad said is...only the law
will help you."
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e widespread issue of sexual harassment and sexual assault in the military
starts by ending it at the service academies," Jacob said in a
statement.West Point did not immediately return a call seeking comment.Other academy officials
said they believe the increase in reporting indicates a positive step in
making cadets and midshipmen feel more comfortable about reporting incidents
a crucial part of addressing the problem."We believe that there's much more
trust in our system than maybe we've seen in years past," said
Col. Reni Renner, vice commandant culture and climate at the Air Force
Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo.Deborah Goode, a spokeswoman at the Naval Academy
in Annapolis, Md., said the school includes training for midshipmen throughout all
four years to prevent harassment and encourage reporting."We believe there is a
better understanding by midshipmen of what constitutes sexual harassment and sexual assault,
as well as an increased willingness to re
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PHOENIX Some people in Phoenix are threatening to pull their support
for the Humane Society after it euthanized a cat brought in for
medical treatment by a former heroin addict.The Arizona Republic reports (http://bit.ly/tNzWqN )
that Daniel Dockery's 9-month-old cat, Scruffy, was put down not because of
its wounds but because the 49-year-old Phoenix man couldn't immediately pay for
its care.Dockery had been searching for Scruffy since taking it to the
Humane Society three weeks ago and learned of Scruffy's fate on Tuesday.
He says he's devastated.A Humane Society spokeswoman says the agency took Scruffy
intending to treat it and put it in foster care, but when
he was taken to a second-chance clinic with three other cats, doctors
were only available to treat two of them.
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