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BRADENTON, Fla.  A 79-year-old woman attempting to maneuver in a Florida 
parking lot backed into a group of people Sunday, killing three people 
and injuring four others, authorities said.A Florida Highway Patrol report 
released Sunday night indicated the accident wasn't alcohol related. The 
report didn't list any charges for the driver, identified as Doreen Landstra 
of Palmetto, but said the investigation was continuing.The accident happened 
at a mobile home community called the Sugar Creek Country Club at 
11:20 a.m. in Bradenton, about 45 miles south of Tampa. Residents had 
gathered for church services inside a clubhouse building, Florida Highway 
Patrol Lt. Gregory Bueno said.The report says Landstra backed out of a 
parking spot, pulled her 2009 Chevrolet Tahoe SUV forward and needed more 
room to clear another parked vehicle. At that point, Landstra's SUV began 
backing up again and struck seven people. The report doesn't make clear 
why she failed to stop before hitting people.The report says the Tahoe 
continued in the same direction before running over a curb, colliding with 
some small trees and coming to rest in a canal, partially submerged.Messages 
left for Landstra on Sunday night weren't immediately returned. Neither 
she nor her passenger were injured.One person was pronounced dead at the 
scene, and two others died after being transported to a nearby hospital. 
The police report identified those who died as Margaret Vanderlaan, 72; 

Jan. 30, 2014: In this Thursday photo, residents attend a devotional at 
the Salvation Army in Los Banos, Calif. After the spiritual service, they 
each collect a bag of free food. Leaders at the Los Banos 
Salvation Army fear that the states drought will cause more people to 
need food this year because they wont have jobs on Central Valley 
farms.APMENDOTA, Calif.  Religious leaders of multiple faiths and farmers 
in Nevada and Utah turned to prayer this weekend for help easing 
severe drought conditions gripping the West.The plea to above comes weeks 
after the federal government declared parts of 11 parched Western and Central 
states natural disaster areas.Faith leaders asked for divine intervention 
during a special multifaith service Saturday at a Mormon church in the 
Reno suburb of Sparks. And on Sunday, the Utah Farm Bureau Federation 
asked the public to join in prayer and fasting for snow and 
rain for livestock and crops as part of its Harvesting Faith event."We 
can't go to the Legislature to ask for help, (so) we decided 
to go to the guy upstairs," Ron Gibson, a dairy farmer in 
Weber County, Utah, told the Deseret News. "One thing you learn as 
a farmer is most of the things that happen in your life 
are totally out of your control."Rajan Zed, who organized the Nevada service, 
said Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Jewish, Baha'i and other faith 
leaders who participated are confident it'll bring positive results."When 
God sees (all t
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