[Swlugevents] Boost your testosterone with Testoril today - more info!
Testoril
Testoril at kevankamalcran.com
Wed Sep 4 11:21:53 UTC 2013
Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight!
http://www.kevankamalcran.com/2120/136/290/1162/2451.12tt74103107AAF9.php
Unsub- http://www.kevankamalcran.com/2120/136/290/1162/2451.12tt74103107AAF10.html
LONDON A British coroner has delivered a verdict of accidental death
in the case of a stowaway who fell from a plane's undercarriage.The
man's body landed in a street in southwest London in September. Months
later he was identified as Jose Matada, 26, of Mozambique.At an inquest
Thursday, police Det. Sgt. Jeremy Allsup said Matada was identified through
a SIM card in his pocket. One number was traced to a
woman whose family had employed him in South Africa.Matada may have been
trying to reach Britain illegally.Pathologist Robert Chapman said Matada
survived most of the flight from Angola, but might have been killed
by hypothermia, lack of oxygen or the plane's landing gear before his
body hit the ground.Coroner Sean Cummings ruled Matada's death an accident.
at
contains a path to citizenship, still viewed by some as amnesty. Instead
they prefer to coalesce around consensus issues like border security, temporary
workers and workplace enforcement.But if the Senate's comprehensive approach
faces obstacles in the House, the House's piecemeal approach won't fly in
the Senate.Two of the lead authors of the Senate bill, Sens. Chuck
Schumer, D-N.Y., and John McCain, R-Ariz., rejected the piece-by-piece approach
at a breakfast meeting with reporters Thursday hosted by the Christian Science
Monitor. Schumer and McCain said that any time an immigration issue is
advanced individually, even something widely supported like visas for high-tech
workers or a citizenship path for those brought as children, lawmakers and
interest groups start pushing for other issues to get dealt with at
the same time."What we have found is, ironically, it may be a
little counterintuitive, that the best way to pass immigration legislation
is actually a comprehensive bill, because that can achieve more balance
and everybody can get much but not all of what they want,"
Schumer said. "And so I think the idea of doing separate bills
is just not going to work. It's not worked in the past,
and it's not going to work in the future."The House has always
loomed as the toughest barrier to passage of immigration legislation, partly
because many rank-and-file House Republicans don't feel a political imperative
to act. Some GOP House me
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.lug.org.uk/pipermail/swlugevents/attachments/20130904/72436e92/attachment-0001.html>
More information about the Swlugevents
mailing list