Who Doesnât Like Additional Black Friday Savings?
Black Friday
BlackFriday at smlonogv.us
Tue Nov 12 22:52:47 UTC 2013
Claim Your Coupons after Completing the Black Friday Survey
http://www.smlonogv.us/3022/182/402/1475/3028.10tt74103107AAF11.php
Unsub- http://www.smlonogv.us/3022/182/402/1475/3028.10tt74103107AAF12.html
was seen recently when Bolivia's Evo Morales' plane was
grounded in Vienna amid incorrect suspicions that National Security Agency
leader Edward Snowden was on board. The region's leaders used Twitter
to express their disapproval."All international immunities that protect
heads of state have been violated for the empire's obsession," tweeted Venezuelan
President Nicolas Maduro, referring to the United States. Maduro's account,
https://twitter.com/NicolasMaduro , has nearly 1.3 million followers.Maduro
has used Twitter to argue with former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe and
Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin. He often slams Venezuela's wealthy, makes
grammatical errors, and fondly remembers his mentor and predecessor, the
late Hugo Chavez.For many Venezuelans, monitoring Twitter became a must
after Chavez joined the social media platform in late April 2010, according
to comScore, an internet monitoring site. Chavez's account still leads the
pack of Latin American leaders with 4 million Twitter followers.In a politically
divided country like Venezuela, being able to influence the social media
space is key. Almost one out of four Venezuelans in the country
use Twitter regularly, comScore says.Venezuelan officials "don't communicate
first by television, radio or a speech, but through Twitter," said Javier
Pereira, the El Nacional newspaper's website coordinator. "That has caused
us to be alert, monitoring constantly."Venezuela, along with B
This combination of undated file photos provided by the San Diego Sheriff's
Department shows James Lee DiMaggio, 40, left, and Hannah Anderson, 16.AP/San
Diego Sheriff's DepartmentA family friend who kidnapped a 16-year-old girl
had a 20-hour jump on authorities, who discovered he used a timer
to set fire to his rural home where the girl's mother and
younger brother were found dead, a San Diego County Sheriff's Department
spokeswoman said Tuesday.James Lee DiMaggio was spotted on a Border Patrol
surveillance camera at 12:10 a.m. Aug. 4, about 20 hours before his
home caught fire, said the spokeswoman, Jan Caldwell. He is seen inside
his 2013 blue Nissan Versa with 16-year-old Hannah Anderson at a westbound
highway checkpoint.Hannah's disappearance -- discovered after the fire --
triggered a massive search for DiMaggio, 40, that spanned much of the
western United States and parts of Canada and Mexico. DiMaggio, who was
like an uncle to the Anderson children and their father's best friend,
died in a shootout with FBI agents in the Idaho wilderness six
days after the fire. Hannah was rescued and returned to Southern California.The
discovery that the fire was set by a timer prompted investigators to
warn the public during the manhunt that DiMaggio's car might be rigged
with explosives, Caldwell said. As it turns out, the car wasn't rigged.Investigators
who searched DiMaggio's home found an incendiary device, handcuff boxes
and "arson wire,"
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.lug.org.uk/pipermail/swlugevents/attachments/20131112/3b0b18f0/attachment-0001.html>
More information about the Swlugevents
mailing list