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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">ST. JOHN'S, ANTIGUA - Two men who murdered honeymooning British couple Ben
and Catherine Mullany were each given three consecutive life sentences Friday by
the Antigua High Court, Sky News reported.Kaniel Martin and Avie Howell were
found guilty of shooting the couple, from south Wales, just two weeks
after they had married in July 2008.Catherine Mullany, a doctor, died instantly
after being shot in the back of the head. Her husband, a
physiotherapy student, survived for a week.The couple, both 31, had come to
the Caribbean island for their honeymoon and were shot at their beach
side resort during a robbery.Martin, 23, and Howell, 22, were also convicted
of the murder of local shopkeeper Woneta Anderson in almost identical circumstances.The
pair had faced the possibility of the death penalty for the killings.
It's been quite a few years since David Heffernan warmed a church
pew on a regular basis. The Queens, N.Y., native grew up Catholic,
but he doesn't attend Mass often."Probably a little bit of laziness." he
says, "or a little bit of shame. It's hard to come back."Heffernan
is exactly the kind of person a new national ad campaign is
targeting: lapsed Catholics.According to a Pew study, about 10 percent of American
adults are former Catholics, with more leaving the church annually than are
joining.Catholics Come Home, a television advertising campaign, has proved successful in 30
regional markets, helping raise attendance at Mass by 10 percent overall and
by as much as 18 percent in some areas.Now, for the first
time, it's going national -- and potentially reaching 250 million viewers.Tom Peterson,
president and founder of Catholics Come Home, says of the $3.5 million
media blitz, "It's taken us over 15 years as a grassroots effort
to raise that money, and about
wn standards.Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, called the light-bulb provision "an early Christmas
present for all Americans" and said it strikes a blow against expensive
fluorescents that he said are not as reliable as the old-style incandescents
that have changed little since Thomas Edison's day."This means Americans can continue
to flip the switch on an affordable and reliable product, instead of
turning to one that costs five times more and may not live
up to manufacturers' promises," said Barton, a former House energy chairman who
opposed the 2007 law and has worked to overturn it ever since.Jim
Presswood, federal energy policy director for the Natural Resources Defense Council, an
environmental group, called the GOP-backed delay dim-witted."It's just a completely ridiculous move
by Congress," Presswood said. "It undermines the ability of the Energy Department
to enforce standards that are going to give consumers tremendous savings as
well as reduce pollution."
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