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TAMPA, Fla. Florida authorities are hoping good weather will improve their
chances of tracking down a sailboat that may be carrying two boys
kidnapped from their grandparents' home.The Hillsborough County Sheriff's
Office says Joshua Michael Hakken entered his mother-in-law's house north
of Tampa early Wednesday, tied her up and fled with his sons,
4-year-old Cole and 2-year-old Chase.Authorities are searching for a boat
Hakken recently bought. It's described as having a blue Bimini top, white
mainsail, and a blue hull with the word "Salty" and a paw
print in white on both sides, with a white stripe near the
water line. There is possibly a yellow horseshoe life preserver on deck.Sheriff's
office spokesman Larry McKinnon tells The Tampa Tribune (http://bit.ly/12xyjhY)
that good weather means more recreational and boaters will be on the
water and able to help in the search.Storms had been moving along
the west coast of Florida and in the Gulf of Mexico last
week, but conditions improved Saturday and Sunday.Federal, state and local
authorities are searching for the sailboat by sea and air. Pictures of
the vessel also have been distributed at local marinas.Hakken, his wife
Sharyn and the boys could be anywhere, McKinnon said. The truck the
family had been traveling in was found late Thursday, abandoned in a
parking garage in Madeira Beach."The Gulf of Mexico is 200,000 square nautical
miles," said McKinnon. "We are looking up and down the
FILE: December 17, 2012: Women carry packages into the James A. Farley
Post Office Building in New York City.REUTERSThe financially strapped U.S.
Postal Service is running into opposition from historic preservationists
as the agency tries to cut losses by selling off buildings.The postal
service lost $15.9 billion last year, after losing $5.1 billion in 2011
-- as online services continue to replace money-making mail deliveries.Hundreds
of post offices are on the National Register of Historic Places, which
largely protects them from being demolished, or are protected under deals
with new owners.But preservationists point out some of the 600 post offices
earmarked for disposal in the agencys fiscal 2012 report could have historical
significance and be sold.Steve Hutkins, a New York University professor
who runs the website Save the Post Office, told FoxNews.com the number
for sale might be closer to 200 because about 400 would be
lease terminations, yet he remains skeptical.The New York Times reports
11 historic post offices are now on the market, including ones in
Santa Monica, Calif., and Norwich, Conn.While many of the buildings are
most known for the exterior architectural designs, more than 1,000 have
Art-Deco-era murals of potential value, the result of the federal government
commissioning artists during the 1930s Depression.Bernard Perlin, who as
a young man painted a mural in 1939 in a New Jersey
post office, later had his work c
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