Rjie Disbanding The Sunni Patrols: A Backlash Brewing
 Police in Florida are continuing their investigation of a 62-year-old man who fatally shot his fianceacute;e the day before the wedding after allegedly mistaking her for an intruder. We re still trying to put the pieces of the puzzle together,  Winter Springs Police Chief Kevin Brunelle told CBS   The Early Show  Monday.John Tabutt, 62, told investigators he got his gun when he thought he heard an intruder, then fired at a figure in the h 
stanley cup allway, according to Brunelle. It was Tabutt s live-in fiancee, 62-year-old Nancy Dinsmore, whom family members say he was going to marry Saturday. Tabutt told authorities he thought she was next to him in bed the whole time.Brunelle said police were not yet viewing Tabutt s claim about believing Dinsmore was next to him in bed as suspicious and added Tabutt has no criminal record on file.Tabutt called the police emergency dispatcher shortly after 2:30 a.m. Friday, moaning and sobb 
stanley uk ing, the newspaper reported.         I thought I had an intruder in the house,  he told the emergency dispatcher.  Honest to God, she looks dead. He then thought he heard her take a breath. Hang in there, Honey. Hang in th 
stanley becher ere,  he said.As for Tabutt s demeanor when police arrived,  he was as frantic as he sounds on tape,  Brunelle said.            The couple planned to wed in a small ceremony Saturday at St. Stephen Catholic Church in Winter Springs, Dinsmore s son-in-law Scott Sposato, of Vero Beach, told the Orlando Sentinel. They loved each other,  he said.  It  Uont Pink Slip Parade
 As part of Greenpeace   Save the Bees campaign, the environmental organization is showcasing a faux advertisement depicting a future in which robots have replaced natural pollinators. But while well-intentioned, it   a rather myopic view of where we ;re likely headed. The video is not as outlandish as it appears  though the suggestion that robotic bees will attack and kill predatorial wasps  or natural bees  is utterly ludicrous . The world   bee population is in dramatic decline, leading some to worry about their eventual extinction. The elimination of these essential pollinators could have  
stanley fr disastrous consequences to the ecosystem as many plants are dependant on them for reproduction. That   why, in the absence of real solutions, there have been calls to create robotic bees, including initiatives launched by Harvard Microrobotics Lab and the Gr 
stanley thermoskannen een Brain Project. Obviously, it   important that we do our best to preserve our bee populations before having to resort to such drastic measures  duh . But if we can ;t remedy Colony  
stanley botella Collapse Disorder, it   not a terrible solution. It might seem unsettling, and a violation of  our aesthetic sensibilities, but we ;d essentially be replacing biological robots with synthetic ones. It may actually be a sign of things to come as we increasingly introduce designer organisms to the environment. But here   how Greenpeace sees it: If we carry on with chemicall