[21756] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Brain Doctors Hate Him...
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Cognizine)
Wed Nov 20 06:00:51 2013
Date: Wed, 20 Nov 2013 03:00:50 -0800
From: "Cognizine" <Cognizine@rehuncuthgoan.us>
To: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
Reply-To: <bounce-65731829@rehuncuthgoan.us>
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Brain Doctors Hate Him...
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Nov. 14, 2013: A passenger fell out of this Piper PA 46
aircraft, which is shown at the Kendall-Tamiami Executive Airport in Miami.WSVNMIAMI
Rescue crews searched an area southeast of Miami after a pilot
reported to the Federal Aviation Administration that a passenger fell out
of his small plane into the ocean Thursday.FAA spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen
says the call came at 1:30 p.m. Thursday from the pilot of
a Piper PA 46 aircraft. The plane was flying at about 2,000
feet when the call came in, she said.Coast Guard and Miami-Dade Fire
Rescue air and water units were searching an area about eight miles
southeast of Tamiami Executive Airport, south of Miami, where the plane
safely landed. It wasn't immediately clear where the flight originated or
how many people were on board.According to a recording on the website
LiveATC.Net, the unidentified pilot calmly radioed "mayday, mayday, mayday,"
and told an air traffic controller a door was ajar."I have a
door ajar and a passenger that fell down. I'm six miles from
Tamiami," the pilot says."You said you've got a passenger that fell out
of your plane?" the air traffic controller responds."That's correct, sir,"
the pilot responded. "He opened the back door and he just fell
out the plane."LiveATC.Net provides live air traffic-control broadcasts
from control towers and radar facilities around the world.Both the Coast
Guard and fire rescue officials said they hadn't confirmed whether the pilot's
ed by the holy man's dream.However, the
Geological Survey of India has said it found signs of heavy metal
about 66 feet underground before deciding to dig in the area in
Unnao district, about 50 miles southwest of the state's capital of Lucknow.Mishra
said Friday that appeared to have been an error.The state-run Archaeological
Survey of India found some artifacts and reached sediments of calcium carbonates
in the first trench, Mishra said.There was no hope of finding any
archaeological objects beyond that as the diggers hit rocks in the second
trench, he told The Associated Press."There is no indication of (the presence)
any alloy as reported by the GSI team," Mishra said in his
report.
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<strong><center><a href="http://www.rehuncuthgoan.us/3148/172/376/1393/2923.10tt65731829AAF1.php"><H3>Brain Doctors Hate Him...</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">le on
an adjacent parking garage roof, one of the officials said.Officers from
multiple agencies bent down to check on Hernandez before moving on, officials
said.Police broadcast over their radios that Ciancia was in custody at 9:25
a.m., five minutes after Hernandez was shot in the chest. That's when
a nearly 26-year veteran Los Angeles police officer checked on Hernandez
several times, repeatedly telling officers who came by from various agencies
"he's dead," according to one of the law enforcement officials.It's unclear
whether the officer was qualified to determine Hernandez was dead. No officers
rendered first aid on scene, according to surveillance video reviewed by
the officials. Finally, airport police put Hernandez in a wheelchair and
ran him to an ambulance.Trauma surgeon David Plurad said Hernandez had no
signs of life when he arrived at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center. Doctors worked
for about an hour to revive him despite significant blood loss."When somebody
is shot and they're bleeding to death, lifesaving skills need to be
implemented immediately, in a couple minutes, and they're very simple, pressure
dressings, tourniquets, adequate bandages to stop the bleeding," said Dr.
Lawrence E. Heiskell, an emergency physician for 27 years and a reserve
police officer for 24 years who founded the state and federally approved
International School of Tactical Medicine.Responding to a situation with
a shooter on the loose has changed sin
MOSCOW Russia's media oversight agency aims to take a newspaper to
court over an article about a homosexual teacher in what appears to
be the first case prepared against a publication under the country's law
on gay propaganda.In September, a youth-oriented newspaper in Khabarovsk
interviewed a teacher who had been fired over his sexual orientation. Quotes
in the article prompted complaints to Roskomnadzor, the agency that supervises
media conformance with law.A regional spokeswoman for the agency, Olga Shakhmatova,
was quoted by the Interfax news agency on Wednesday as saying the
article violated a law forbidding distribution to minors of material supporting
non-traditional sexual relationships.She said documents would be sent to
court soon, but Roskomnadzor officials said Friday they did not know if
the case had been filed. The law calls for fines of up
to 100,000 rubles ($3,300) for individuals and 1 million rubles ($33,000)
for organizations along with a possible 90-day suspension.The law, passed
this summer, has raised criticism abroad and caused concern about whether
it would be applied to athletes and spectators at the Winter Olympics
in the Russian city of Sochi in February.Homosexuality is not illegal in
Russia, but animosity toward gays is high. The new law does not
define either the criteria for considering an action or statement to be
propaganda or what sort of distribution to minors is prohibited. Critics
say the lack of cl
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