[Abel-tasman] Heat your food up to two times faster
Buy NuWave Cooktop
BuyNuWaveCooktop at vdmyecanion.us
Mon Apr 7 17:07:35 CEST 2014
Cookware featured on CBS , ABC , Fox, and Spike television
http://www.vdmyecanion.us/l/lt30LPDOBF4971GXKLJI195INVW/440K1572CHIIL3250WI10BWD62883642OMUBB3590125451
Unsub- http://www.vdmyecanion.us/l/lc12KEPNLW4971MVKXET195NCQB/440E1572AJONG3250AO10FDG62883642UAJVK3590125451
aid, crying.
"We hope for a miracle that he will be ok."Johana Portillo wasn't
at the Saturday afternoon game in the Salt Lake City suburb of
Taylorsville, but she said she's been told by witnesses and detectives that
the player hit her father in the side of the head after
he issued the yellow card."When he was writing down his notes, he
just came out of nowhere and punched him," she said.His friends who
were there told her Ricardo Portillo seemed fine at first, but then
asked to be held because he felt dizzy. They sat him down
and he started vomiting blood, triggering his friend to call an ambulance.
The referee has been in a coma since Saturday.Johana Portillo said her
father's passion is soccer, and he's been a referee in the recreational
league for eight years. Five years ago, a player upset with a
call broke his ribs. A few years before that, a player broke
his leg, she said. Other referees have been hurt, too.His daughters begged
him to stop refereeing -- his second job -- but he continued
because he loved soccer."It was his passion," she said. "We could not
tell him no."The league is not affiliated with the Utah Youth Soccer
Association or any city or town recreation department. It is called the
Liga Continental, said the referee's brother-in-law Pedro Lopez, who also
gets paid to referee in the league.Johana Portillo said the family doesn't
know the teenager who threw the punch, and they haven't heard from
him or anyone in h
get said many
of the claimed benefits from EPA clean air regulations "are mostly attributable
to the reduction in public exposure to a single air pollutant: fine
particulate matter."The EPA claims that changes made to emissions standards
and other areas will save billions in health costs for the public.The
same report estimated that in fiscal 2012, 14 major rules came with
between $14.8 billion and $19.5 billion in annual costs, but with between
$53.2 billion and $114.6 billion in annual benefits.The Heritage report's
estimate of the annual costs imposed in 2012 were not that far
off -- Heritage pegged the annual cost of 2012 rules at $23.5
billion.The Heritage report did not delve deeply into the benefits of all
these regulations, though suggested the administration has exaggerated those
numbers. The analysis said the "particulate matter" pollutant EPA often
cites is already subject to EPA regulations, calling the claimed benefits
of additional reductions "speculative."
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20140407/ea83d49c/attachment.htm
More information about the Abel-tasman
mailing list