Wednesday, June 6, 2007

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Woman Dies In Car, Bus Collision On Ala. Highway

Police in Montgomery, Ala., said a car went the wrong way on a divided highway and collided head-on with a Greyhound bus early Saturday morning.

The woman driving the car was killed and 20 people were injured.

Passengers, forced to crawl out windows, describe panic on the bus after the accident.

The crash jammed the bus door shut, as the car sat smoking.

Passenger Clint Cannon said, "People were screaming. They were handing babies out the windows. It was a frenzy."

Cannon also said the bus driver did all he could to avoid the crash. He described the driver turning left and right, only to have his moves matched by the oncoming car.

Greyhound said the bus was carrying 49 passengers and two drivers when it left the Montgomery terminal.

(Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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Cellphone-blocking Clarins Expertise 3P skin care wafts into the ...

We're always wanting that skin to glow around the virtual office here, but never would we suspect that "Artificial Electromagnetic Waves" could be hurting us. While the merits of studies that show radiation from wireless handsets harm or don't harm humans are far from final, it's pleasing to know that anti-cellphone skin care is close at hand. In addition to those cheaply made "anti-radiation" stickers that go for about 10 cents these days, the new Expertise 3P skin care product from Clarins will -- get this -- protect you from "Artificial Electromagnetic Waves." We're not sure how one determines if certain RF emissions are "artificial" or not, but nonetheless this new skin care product features a "Magnetic Defence Complex" that protects skin from the effects of "Artificial Electromagnetic Waves" and also has an "Anti-Pollution Complex" that contains White Tea and Succory Dock-Cress.

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DMV employee charged in license fraud

REIDSVILLE 鈥?An employee with the state Division of Motor Vehicles was charged Wednesday with selling fake driver's licenses, authorities said. Gee Annette Holloman, 48, and her husband, Vicente Munoz Trujillo, 38, are accused of selling driver's licenses to two undercover officers on March 16, authorities said. On Tuesday,detectives executed a search warrant at the couple's home at 2501 Friends Ave. in High Point. Located in the residence were numerous licenses, birth certificates, passports, Social Security cards and other documents believed to be used in the case, authorities stated. Holloman is charged with two counts of obtaining property through false pretenses and two counts of wrongfully issuing a driver's license. Trujillo is charged with two counts of obtaining property through false pretenses and aid/abet the wrongful issue of a drivers license.