[Swlugevents] swlugevents, can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?
OmegaK
OmegaK at milkachocolategood.info
Fri Aug 16 10:12:50 UTC 2013
Can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?
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MIAMI The man who shot and killed six people at his
South Florida apartment complex before being gunned down by police called
911 hours before the shooting to say he was being followed.In the
bizarre, 12-minute call, Pedro Vargas asked a dispatcher to run the license
plate of a vehicle outside his building. He also said he was
the victim of someone doing witchcraft against him.A recording of the call
was released Wednesday by the Hialeah Police Department.At one point, the
dispatcher asked to speak with Vargas' mother. The elderly woman got on
the phone and told the dispatcher her son was acting disturbed and
that she wanted to get him an appointment with a psychiatrist.She declined
a dispatcher's offer to send police to the apartment.
With preferred seats harder to get, passengers are desperate enough to offer
bribes to their fellow fliers. ReutersGetting the seat you want on a
flight has never been more of a hassle.Last year, domestic flights in
the U.S. were 83 percent full, the highest passenger load factor recorded
since 1945. On top of crowded flights, most airlines have schemes in
place to reserve choice seats for frequent flyers or those willing to
pay a feeAmid this atmosphere, some passengers are desperate enough to offer
bribes to get their preferred seat.Airline employees can lose their jobs
for accepting bribes, so few are willing take the risk of offering
an upgrade or a better seat in exchange for a kickback. In
some countries, bribes can still get you onto a full flight or
in a better seat, but in the U.S., passengers who cant get
their way may be stuck pulling out their wallet and approaching their
fellow passengers.While not illegal or prohibited by the airlines, passengers
exchanging bribes is a concern for some who say it will create
chaos in the cabin.- Dr. Joyce Hunter, associate professor at Saint Xavier
UniversityLast month, Jason Goldberg, the CEO and founder of Fab.com offered
his fellow passengers $100 to swap seats in the first class cabin
of a flight from Stockholm to Newark so that he and a
colleague could collaborate on a work project. When they declined the offer,
he vented his frustration to his 37,000 Facebook followers.The dude next
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