Lygs Amtrak Derails In Mississippi
The Department of Homeland Security has stopped short of reassuring illegal immigrants victimized by Hurricane Katrina that they can seek help from relief agencies without fear of arrest, a promise the federal government made after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.Spokeswoman Joanna Gonzalez refused to directly answer repeated questions about whether the agency can assure illegal immigrants that their information would not be turned over to law enforcement agencies when they seek help. We want to provide food, water, shelter and medical supplies to everyone. No one should be afraid to accept our offer
stanley cup s to provide safety, Gonzalez said in an e-mail message.Rescuers have not been asking people whether they are in the country legally when they are rescuing them, she said. She said she has repeated that Spanish-language television and radio.Asked several times Thursday for an update to her response, Gonzalez said there were no updates. Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials are as
stanley flask sisting in the hurricane response and helping to find survivors.Ten days after the Sept. 11 attacks, then-immigration chief James Ziglar issued a statement en
stanley us couraging undocumented immigrants who thought they had lost friends or family in the World Trade Center to contact local authorities. He said they could do so without fear authorities would try to get their information for immigration purposes. He repeated the statement in a New York news conference a few weeks later.Mexi Mvic Slain bombing suspect bought lock and load fireworks in February
Once upon a time computers were for thinking 82
stanley cup website 30; That no longer true. Computers are for communicating now, and networks allowed that to happen. That Harvard astronomer-turned-computer expert Clifford Stoll, quoted in the November 20, 1988 edition of the Washington Post. And yes, that the same Cliff Stoll who just a few years later would proclaim that the in
stanley quencher ternet potential to transform the way we live was largely just a bunch of hype. The Internet Bah! 1995 Barton Gellman 1988 article about the internet for the Post is quite a fascinating artifact. We see the introduction of terms that hadn ;t yet ent
stanley mugs ered the national lexicon, such as 8220 nail mail, virus, and netiquette. And we see the writer slowly introducing the public to the idea that this network could be something important to their lives in the future. We also see the warnings that a more connected world will have its downsides, as in the case of computer viruses able to spread at lightning speed. From the November 20, 1988 Washington Post: Using Internet and overlapping networks, thousands of men and women in 17 countries swap recipes and woodworking tips, debate politics, religion and antique cars, form friendships and even fall in love. But the networks that link tens of thousands of computers 24 hours a day also allowed the computer virus to spread much more rapidly, and with far greater potential for damag