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5 children among those killed in Soldotna crash
<html>COLUMBIA, S.C. -- The nine South Carolinians killed in Sunday's crash in Soldotna included a family of five and a family of four, both from Greenville, in the northwestern corner of the state, according to family friends and law enforcement sources. So far, Alaska officials have only identified the pilot, who also died. He is Walter Rediske,Quality SEO Services with Right Company, of Nikiski. Milton Antonakos,Yankees 2 Jeter grey Kids Jerseys, his wife, Kimberly, and their three children -- 16-year-old Olivia, 14-year-old Mills and 12-year-old Anna -- were on the plane, according to state Rep. Bruce Bannister,LINCOLN, Neb.- New Nebraska research center to study concuss, R-Greenville, who was a neighbor of the family. Chris McManus, his wife, Stacey, and their two children -- Connor and Meghan -- also were on the plane, according to their pastor, law enforcement officials and family friends. "I just can't believe it," Bannister said of the Antonakos family. "They were on the plane, on a family vacation, and they are not coming back." Bannister,Ultimate Texans » Cushing- Watt could become best defensive player ever, a lawyer, said he met Milton Antonakos several years ago when he represented him in a legal matter. He described a loving family that took care of each other and their neighbors. "Anna is in my son's class and got basically every award you can get at the fifth-grade awards day,New York Knicks Big & Tall Primary Logo Brown Women's T-Shirt," Bannister said. "Mills, the boy, every morning would go out and get (his neighbor's) newspaper and take it to his porch so he didn't have to walk out on the driveway." Bannister said Milton Antonakos was "one of those people that would just spend any amount of time that he needed to with his kids," while Kimberly always was volunteering at her children's schools. Bannister said several of the children were on a local swim team. "They were just an absolutely fabulous family," he said. Olivia Antonakos was a rising junior at J.L. Mann High School, where she was a varsity basketball player and just had been elected secretary of the student body. Most of her basketball teammates were playing in a tournament in Atlanta, a tournament Olivia skipped to vacation with her family, according to Charles Mayfield, the school's principal. While students are on summer break, Mayfield said, the J.L. Mann Student Council has delivered flowers to the Antonakos house and left a guest book there for mourners to sign. Mayfield said the Antonakos' neighborhood planned a prayer service Monday evening. "It's just a loss for the school and for the whole community," Mayfield said. "They were just good people. They thought of others before they thought of themselves. To lose the whole family, it's just really shocking." The McManus family made Marshall Johnson and his family feel welcome when they recently moved into their Greenville neighborhood. "They were very easy going," said Johnson, whose wife once taught Connor McManus at Christ Church Episcopal School in Greenville. "They were beautiful." Connor McManus was working with his father, a radiologist, to earn the Boy Scouts' highest rank, Eagle Scout, Johnson said. Meghan McManus, a rising senior at Christ Church Episcopal School, was looking at colleges with her family, Johnson said. Her sophomore project last year was on the "Ronald McDonald House: Keeping Families Together," according to the school's website. The pair were acolytes at Christ Church Episcopal this spring and were involved in youth programs. Stacey McManus was a board member of the Episcopal women's group at the church, had worked with the hand bell choir, and taught Sunday and vacation Bible school, said the Rev. Harrison McLeod, rector at Christ Church Episcopal. She also helped run the auction at the school's annual gala this spring. "She did all that with a smile on her face," McLeod said. Chris McManus was very "caring and thoughtful" and dedicated to his medical patients, the reverend said. Several parishioners came to the church Monday to pray for the McManus family. In addition to their dedication to the church, the family was known for always being together. "This vacation was indicative of who they were," McLeod said. "They enjoyed each other's company. They were a wonderful example of how a family can play together and get the most from each other." McManus was past president of the state chapter of the American College of Radiology and an officer of the Greenville Hospital System medical staff. "He has been a wonderful asset to the medical community," said Dr. David Williams III, chairman of GHS' radiology department. "He was an extraordinary physician but also an extraordinary human being who was known to be both compassionate and conscientious." This is the second Alaska airplane crash in little more than a week to claim the lives of South Carolinians. Two people -- 74-year-old John Ellenberg of Greenville and 52-year-old Laurie Buckner of Simpsonville -- were killed in the June 28 crash of a tour plane near Cantwell, that also claimed the life of the pilot.</html>
V.I. Legislature back in session today to fix mistakes
<html>ST. THOMAS - The V.I. Legislature is meeting in formal session today to clean up a bill passed Friday that closed the Fiscal Year 2013 budget gap. "We have to reconsider that bill," Senate President Shawn-Michael Malone said. "But nothing will change in the policy." Malone said the bill had errors that cannot be fixed by the Legislative legal counsel before being sent up to Government House. "Substantive technical amendments" require approval by the full Senate,Types of SEO Companies Utah Businesses Should Know, which is why he scheduled today's session,Jacksonville Jaguars Women's Heart & Soul L.Green T-Shirt, he said. At the June 29 session,Crucial Aspects of SEO Packages,NIKE Titans 28 JOHNSON sky Black-blue Elite Jerseys, the body passed a number of bills, including a measure to close the current $23.6 million budget shortfall and ensure the restoration of the government employees' 8 percent pay cuts. The measure makes an across-the-board cut of 3 percent to all government departments and agencies in the current fiscal year. It also cuts $10 million from the FY 2013 budget's miscellaneous section. Malone said one of the things that needs cleaning up in the bill pertains to the budget cuts. "The sum wasn't adding up properly," he said. He also said the language about the amount of money needed to restore the 8 percent salary cuts was outdated. Initially, the Senate budgeted $7 million to restore the cuts for the last quarter of FY 2013. Because a number of employees have left government service,Scope of SEO in India, the government only needs $5 million to cover the restoration. The new amount must be reflected in the bill, Malone said. "We just want to make it clean," Malone said about the bill. The legislation will be the only bill on today's agenda. Malone said he anticipates the session will last less than two hours. - Contact Aldeth Lewin at 714-9111 or email alewin@dailynews.vi.</html>
'Gasland' sequel asserts drillers corrupting gov'
<html>Josh Fox galvanized the U.S. anti-fracking movement with his incendiary 2010 documentary "Gasland." Now he's back with a sequel - and this time, he's targeting an audience of just one. "We want the president to watch the movie, and we want him to meet with the people who are in it," says Fox,Improving Your Company Surroundings with Industria, whose "Gasland Part II" makes its HBO debut Monday. He contends President Barack Obama's professed support of drilling and fracking for natural gas ignores the environmental and public health toll of the drilling boom: "It looks like he's really sincere and earnest in his desire to take on climate change, but he's got the completely wrong information and thus the completely wrong plan." A typically bold statement from Fox,The Strategy for Energy Consumption Optimization, who's emerged as one of the nation's most visible and outspoken foes of the natural gas drilling industry. Having made his name as an avant-garde theater director in New York City, Fox took an interest in drilling after a gas company approached him in 2008 about leasing his family's wooded 20-acre spread in Milanville, Pa., near the Delaware River. What resulted was "Gasland," a polemic that argued energy companies are turning whole communities into toxic industrial wastelands. "Part II" covers a lot of the same ground as the Emmy-winning and Oscar-nominated original, as Fox takes his banjo and camera on the road again to interview residents who say their air and water were contaminated by drilling. Beleaguered homeowners demonstrate how they can light their methane-laced tap water on fire - same as in "Gasland" - though the pyrotechnics in "Part II" are more spectacular. What's new here is the focus on what Fox sees as the drilling industry's corrupting influence on politicians and regulators. In "Gasland Part II," the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is cast in the role of protector and defender. The agency starts to hold the industry to account for contaminating heavily drilled neighborhoods in Dimock, Pa.; Parker County, Texas; and Pavillion,NIKE Ravens 27 RICE White Elite Jerseys, Wyo. Then the drillers get to work,Utilizing Social Media Marketing Firm, buying off politicians who, in turn, force the EPA to back off. Meanwhile,Nike Texans 99 Watt Black Impact Limited 10th Jerseys, Obama's 2012 State of the Union address sets the tone for an election-year policy shift that replaces science with political expediency. Fox portrays an industry that is shadowy and malevolent, the power behind the throne of government. "I felt like I could see it: a horizontal well bore, drilled down into the earth, snaking underneath the Congress, shooting money up through the chamber at such high pressure that it blew the top off of our democracy," he narrates. "Another layer of contamination due to fracking, not the water, not the air, but our government." Of course, the industry doesn't see it that way. Energy companies call Fox an extremist who spreads lies and misinformation about fracking, the technique that's allowed drilling companies to extract huge volumes of natural gas from rock formations deep underground. "The real reason that shale development has expanded is not because of some nefarious plot on the part of industry leaders wearing black robes," writes Steve Everley of Energy In Depth, an industry-funded PR group. "Rather, it's because people across the United States have recognized that there are massive environmental and economic benefits to be reaped. ... Both political parties are pushing for increased responsible natural gas production, and it's because of the facts, not because they've been 'captured' by Corporate America." Attitudes and positions about fracking have only hardened since the original "Gasland." Anti-drilling activists and Big Gas tend to view the other with profound distrust, and there is little common ground. But the reality is more complicated than either side would probably care to admit. Landowners have become overnight millionaires, businesses catering to the gas industry have boomed and cheap gas has lowered utility bills. Some climate scientists say the rapid conversion of coal-fired power plants to natural gas has helped reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This is a side of the shale gas revolution that "Gasland Part II" ignores. Yet it's also true that drilling has contaminated residential water wells and brought incredible truck traffic to rural roads never designed to handle it. Some residents have complained about underhanded industry leasing tactics; others assert that gas drilling has made them sick. The industry's typical response? Gloss over problems or deny them outright. Driving home the point, "Part II" plays audio from an industry conference in Texas at which a drilling company official encourages the use of military-style psychological operations, or PSYOPS, to counteract anti-fracking fervor. At the same conference, another company's PR rep urges his colleagues to read the military's counterinsurgency field manual "because we are dealing with an insurgency" - namely, anti-drilling residents and environmentalists. Fox said the industry has smeared homeowners who dared to speak up about their ruined water or ill health, employing tactics used by the tobacco industry decades ago to mislead the public about the dangers of smoking. It's no wonder environmental activists and industry can't bridge the divide, he said. "I don't see a middle ground. What we're talking about here is a force of people who are trying desperately to change the world, and a fossil fuel industry that is trying desperately to keep ruling it. I don't know what a middle ground would be," Fox said. Beyond "Gasland Part II," the filmmaker is working on a short documentary about what he calls an "epidemic of illness" among gas industry workers. Longer term, he said, he intends to move on to broader issues of climate and sustainability. And then there's that meeting with the president. "I'm hoping for a call one of these days," Fox said.</html>
Ultimate Rockets White saga ends in trade to 76ers
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While waiting to complete an agreement to sign free-agent center Dwight Howard, the Rockets made a move to create more salary-cap space for him Friday, sending forward Royce White to the Philadelphia 76ers,Aston Villa 9 Ireland navy jerseys, according to a person with knowledge of the transaction.
The Rockets sent the rights to Turkish center/forward Furkan Aldemir, a second-round pick in last season’s draft, and cash to get the Sixers to take on the remaining $1.7 million guaranteed on White’s rookie contract.
If the Sixers keep him the 6-8 White, he will rejoin former Rockets vice president Sam Hinkie,Baltimore Ravens Pro Line 81 Boldin Super Bowl XLVII Champions Jerseys,Catching up with an old friend, and reflecting on threescore, now the general manager in Philadelphia.
White, 22, did not play for the Rockets at all last season,Importance of Link Building in Modern World, and stopped attending practices after Nov. 10 in a dispute over agreements he wanted in place related to his anxiety disorder and his assignments to the NBA Development League.
White, the 16th player taken in the 2012 draft,Some New Things You Need to Know About On Page SEO, averaged 11.4 points and 5.7 rebounds in 16 games with the Rio Grande Valley Vipers before leaving the team prior to the playoffs.
Me haven t always seen eye to eye, but you have to respect his ability to make moves like Harden Howard, that s cool.
— Royce White (@Highway_30)</html>