| February 2007
Police say those items were subsequently inventoried at the police station and inside of the pocketbook Ptl. Daniels found a small quantity of packaged Cocaine, Marijuana and several prescription pills. In addition to the A&B charge the suspect 47-year old Gina M Champ of West Dennis was also charged with Possession of a Class B Controlled Substance-Cocaine, Possession of a Class B Controlled Substance-Percocet, Possession of a Class D Controlled Substance-Marijuana and Possession of a Class E Controlled Substance-Klonopin. Ms. Champ was later bailed on personal recognizance and was due to be arraigned in Orleans District Court on Wednesday. Two arrested for burglary, third for assaulting officer in DennisDENNIS - Dennis Police arrest two people for alleged burglary and a third person for allegedly assaulting an officer. Police say approximately 6:30 PM on Tuesday evening they responded to a 9-1-1 call regarding a disturbance at 28 Maple Terrace.
Russian bombers to test-fire missiles in Bay of Biscay
Putin is a smart guy and knows his real lever in Europe is energy, but he also needs to make noise with his military once in a while. If push really came to shove, his military wouldn't last an hour against NATO and he knows it. The only credible weapon he still has is the nuclear tipped ballistic missile, and that isn't a credible threat from anyone but a nutcase (of which Putin clearly is not). These maneuvers are for domestic consumption, because I don't think anyone in the US/NATO military is honestly scared of 1950's prop bombers. For the outside world, this is more like an old fat guy strutting around in a Speedo..... .
Domain Frontrunning: A Ghost In The Machine
ICANN can't find evidence the practice really exists, and the one entity who says he has proof won't provide that proof. It's not like enacting policies against ghosts, exactly. You don't need proof of the existence of frontrunning to enact a policy against it. But in this case, proof might have helped Network Solutions not look so bad. Last month, NetSol came under fire for automatically registering domains that customers had searched for on their site and then jacking up the price of the domains for a four-day period. NetSol defended the practice as protection against frontrunning, which is the practice of registering a domain someone is searching for and then jacking up the price. At least NetSol's protection fee was a set price, $34.99 for four days worth of protection, just until they could return the domain within ICANN's grace period.
Autistic teen reported missing in Vancouver calls, returns home
Anthony K. Abruzzini, a 13-year-old described as mildly autistic, was reported missing by his parents this evening but was found hours later. Anthony phoned his parents about 10 p.m. from a local AM/PM store, where he was located by Clark County Sheriff's Office deputies, said Sgt. C. Rothenberger, a sheriff's spokesman. He was returned home safely. Anthony had last been seen about 9:30 a.m. at the Vancouver School of the Arts and Academics, the sheriff's office said. He did not attend any of his classes there today. His parents discovered a two-page note in which Anthony wrote that he met someone named "Frank" online and planned to live with and work for him. Nothing further was known about "Frank," Rothenberger said. Anthony's friends said that in the past month he had talked about going to Seaside, Ore., to start a new life.
Investigator combs files, book for clues
Mel Wiley was the chief of police in Hinckley Township outside of Cleveland until he vanished without a trace in July 1985. Hinckley's 1980 Toyota station wagon was found at Cleveland's Lakefront State Park on Lake Erie. Locked inside were Hinckley's wallet, police identification and his badge. He hasn't been seen since. He had told his girlfriend the day before he was going to buy a swim suit and go swimming. He never bought a suit, police said, and his friends told investigators he didn't like to swim. Wiley, 47, was an aspiring poet and, when he disappeared, his manuscript for a novel he was writing also vanished, according to published accounts. His literary bent prompted an investigator to check the ribbon in Wiley's typewriter. "Where I've gone," he typed, "is of no critical importance, and it's very doubtful that I'll ever return .
Walls added to MU injury list
That's because freshman shooting guard Matt Walls has joined Darryl Merthie and Jean Francois Bro Grebe on the disabled list with a broken right hand. As a result, Marshall (12-10, 4-5 Conference USA) will have only 10 players available when it takes on SMU (8-13, 2-6) at 8:05 p.m. today at Moody Coliseum in Dallas. What's worse, those 10 "healthy" players include forward Markel Humphrey, who still isn't practicing due to a stress fracture in his right heel; guard Taurean Marshall, who is playing with a slightly-torn anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee; and walk-on freshman forward Bruce Senior, who has played a total of 10 minutes in only four appearances. So, the Herd does indeed have its back to the Walls. The mind-boggling part is Walls actually was standing on the court in the Henderson Center chatting with MU Coach Donnie Jones and Fork Union Military Academy assistant Gary Hines about an hour after Marshall's 83-49 win over East Carolina Saturday and appeared to be fine.
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