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[["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"American will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"Americans will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"British will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"CNN will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"Embassy will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"French will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"Houthi will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"Middle Eastern will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"U.S. will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN)The American and British embassies in Yemen suspended operations and moved staffers out Wednesday, and urged their citizens to leave the politically-unstable nation as well. The U.S. Embassy had already been operating on a skeletal staff since late January. The French embassy also said it would close its doors starting Friday due to the security situation. The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership and potentially on the brink of armed conflict since Houthi rebels seized control of key government facilities, dissolved parliament, and placed the President under house arrest. President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi later resigned in protest.\n\n  - The troubled Middle Eastern nation has been without clear leadership.\n  - The U.S. is worried about possible terrorist attacks on Americans.\n", "  - \"Yemen will temporarily be closed as of Friday, February 13, 2015, until further notice.\""], ["(CNN) Theranos decided to voluntarily withdraw its Zika virus blood test that it had submitted for Food and Drug Administration approval, the company said Wednesday. Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes previously told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta in an exclusive interview that the Zika test, though it's not one that would be as common as a test to check general health, was a priority for the company because it was a \"really important area of blood work.\" She talked about the test at her first presentation to the American Association for Clinical Chemistry Meeting in August. The hope, she said, was to be able to run the Zika test on a new mini-lab device the company debuted at the conference.\n\n  - The company still considers Zika a \"really important area of blood work\".\n  - Theranos cited a \"positive interaction\" with the FDA and said it will resubmit.\n", "  - Creating a American Association for Clinical Chemistry test fits with this mission to make \"it easier for you to get the lab tests you need.\""], ["(CNN) Theranos decided to voluntarily withdraw its Zika virus blood test that it had submitted for Food and Drug Administration approval, the company said Wednesday. Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes previously told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta in an exclusive interview that the Zika test, though it's not one that would be as common as a test to check general health, was a priority for the company because it was a \"really important area of blood work.\" She talked about the test at her first presentation to the American Association for Clinical Chemistry Meeting in August. The hope, she said, was to be able to run the Zika test on a new mini-lab device the company debuted at the conference.\n\n  - The company still considers Zika a \"really important area of blood work\".\n  - Theranos cited a \"positive interaction\" with the FDA and said it will resubmit.\n", "  - Creating a CNN test fits with this mission to make \"it easier for you to get the lab tests you need.\""], ["(CNN) Theranos decided to voluntarily withdraw its Zika virus blood test that it had submitted for Food and Drug Administration approval, the company said Wednesday. Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes previously told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta in an exclusive interview that the Zika test, though it's not one that would be as common as a test to check general health, was a priority for the company because it was a \"really important area of blood work.\" She talked about the test at her first presentation to the American Association for Clinical Chemistry Meeting in August. The hope, she said, was to be able to run the Zika test on a new mini-lab device the company debuted at the conference.\n\n  - The company still considers Zika a \"really important area of blood work\".\n  - Theranos cited a \"positive interaction\" with the FDA and said it will resubmit.\n", "  - Creating a Elizabeth Holmes test fits with this mission to make \"it easier for you to get the lab tests you need.\""], ["(CNN) Theranos decided to voluntarily withdraw its Zika virus blood test that it had submitted for Food and Drug Administration approval, the company said Wednesday. Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes previously told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta in an exclusive interview that the Zika test, though it's not one that would be as common as a test to check general health, was a priority for the company because it was a \"really important area of blood work.\" She talked about the test at her first presentation to the American Association for Clinical Chemistry Meeting in August. The hope, she said, was to be able to run the Zika test on a new mini-lab device the company debuted at the conference.\n\n  - The company still considers Zika a \"really important area of blood work\".\n  - Theranos cited a \"positive interaction\" with the FDA and said it will resubmit.\n", "  - Creating a FDA test fits with this mission to make \"it easier for you to get the lab tests you need.\""], ["(CNN) Theranos decided to voluntarily withdraw its Zika virus blood test that it had submitted for Food and Drug Administration approval, the company said Wednesday. Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes previously told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta in an exclusive interview that the Zika test, though it's not one that would be as common as a test to check general health, was a priority for the company because it was a \"really important area of blood work.\" She talked about the test at her first presentation to the American Association for Clinical Chemistry Meeting in August. The hope, she said, was to be able to run the Zika test on a new mini-lab device the company debuted at the conference.\n\n  - The company still considers Zika a \"really important area of blood work\".\n  - Theranos cited a \"positive interaction\" with the FDA and said it will resubmit.\n", "  - Creating a Food and Drug Administration test fits with this mission to make \"it easier for you to get the lab tests you need.\""], ["(CNN) Theranos decided to voluntarily withdraw its Zika virus blood test that it had submitted for Food and Drug Administration approval, the company said Wednesday. Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes previously told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta in an exclusive interview that the Zika test, though it's not one that would be as common as a test to check general health, was a priority for the company because it was a \"really important area of blood work.\" She talked about the test at her first presentation to the American Association for Clinical Chemistry Meeting in August. The hope, she said, was to be able to run the Zika test on a new mini-lab device the company debuted at the conference.\n\n  - The company still considers Zika a \"really important area of blood work\".\n  - Theranos cited a \"positive interaction\" with the FDA and said it will resubmit.\n", "  - Creating a Sanjay Gupta test fits with this mission to make \"it easier for you to get the lab tests you need.\""], ["(CNN) Theranos decided to voluntarily withdraw its Zika virus blood test that it had submitted for Food and Drug Administration approval, the company said Wednesday. Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes previously told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta in an exclusive interview that the Zika test, though it's not one that would be as common as a test to check general health, was a priority for the company because it was a \"really important area of blood work.\" She talked about the test at her first presentation to the American Association for Clinical Chemistry Meeting in August. The hope, she said, was to be able to run the Zika test on a new mini-lab device the company debuted at the conference.\n\n  - The company still considers Zika a \"really important area of blood work\".\n  - Theranos cited a \"positive interaction\" with the FDA and said it will resubmit.\n", "  - Creating a Theranos test fits with this mission to make \"it easier for you to get the lab tests you need.\""], ["(CNN) Theranos decided to voluntarily withdraw its Zika virus blood test that it had submitted for Food and Drug Administration approval, the company said Wednesday. Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes previously told CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta in an exclusive interview that the Zika test, though it's not one that would be as common as a test to check general health, was a priority for the company because it was a \"really important area of blood work.\" She talked about the test at her first presentation to the American Association for Clinical Chemistry Meeting in August. The hope, she said, was to be able to run the Zika test on a new mini-lab device the company debuted at the conference.\n\n  - The company still considers Zika a \"really important area of blood work\".\n  - Theranos cited a \"positive interaction\" with the FDA and said it will resubmit.\n", "  - Creating a Zika test fits with this mission to make \"it easier for you to get the lab tests you need.\""], ["A Chinese woman said she endured the worst flight of her life when her armrest was occupied by the bare feet of a fellow passenger  for four hours. The woman, named Ms Wu, said her rear passenger, who is allegedly also Chinese, reached out from behind and rested her feet on her chair during the AirAsia flight FD588 from Bangkok to Xi'an on November 29. Ms Wu said she complained in English to the hostess, who was said to be Thai, but the hostess said nothing could be done because 'they are all Chinese,' reported the\u00a0People's Daily Online. According to Ms Wu, as soon as they got on the plane, the passenger, who remains unidentified, took her shoes and socks off and put up her feet on the armrest in front of her.\n\n  - Ms Wu, from China, was flying\u00a0from Bangkok to Xi'an when event occurred.\n  - Claimed her rear passenger put up bare feet\u00a0as soon as they boarded.\n  - Hostess\u00a0allegedly\u00a0said nothing could be done as 'they are all Chinese'.\n", "  - This is not the first time a AirAsia passenger has caused a stir during a flight."], ["A Chinese woman said she endured the worst flight of her life when her armrest was occupied by the bare feet of a fellow passenger  for four hours. The woman, named Ms Wu, said her rear passenger, who is allegedly also Chinese, reached out from behind and rested her feet on her chair during the AirAsia flight FD588 from Bangkok to Xi'an on November 29. Ms Wu said she complained in English to the hostess, who was said to be Thai, but the hostess said nothing could be done because 'they are all Chinese,' reported the\u00a0People's Daily Online. According to Ms Wu, as soon as they got on the plane, the passenger, who remains unidentified, took her shoes and socks off and put up her feet on the armrest in front of her.\n\n  - Ms Wu, from China, was flying\u00a0from Bangkok to Xi'an when event occurred.\n  - Claimed her rear passenger put up bare feet\u00a0as soon as they boarded.\n  - Hostess\u00a0allegedly\u00a0said nothing could be done as 'they are all Chinese'.\n", "  - This is not the first time a Bangkok passenger has caused a stir during a flight."], ["A Chinese woman said she endured the worst flight of her life when her armrest was occupied by the bare feet of a fellow passenger  for four hours. The woman, named Ms Wu, said her rear passenger, who is allegedly also Chinese, reached out from behind and rested her feet on her chair during the AirAsia flight FD588 from Bangkok to Xi'an on November 29. Ms Wu said she complained in English to the hostess, who was said to be Thai, but the hostess said nothing could be done because 'they are all Chinese,' reported the\u00a0People's Daily Online. According to Ms Wu, as soon as they got on the plane, the passenger, who remains unidentified, took her shoes and socks off and put up her feet on the armrest in front of her.\n\n  - Ms Wu, from China, was flying\u00a0from Bangkok to Xi'an when event occurred.\n  - Claimed her rear passenger put up bare feet\u00a0as soon as they boarded.\n  - Hostess\u00a0allegedly\u00a0said nothing could be done as 'they are all Chinese'.\n", "  - This is not the first time a China passenger has caused a stir during a flight."], ["A Chinese woman said she endured the worst flight of her life when her armrest was occupied by the bare feet of a fellow passenger  for four hours. The woman, named Ms Wu, said her rear passenger, who is allegedly also Chinese, reached out from behind and rested her feet on her chair during the AirAsia flight FD588 from Bangkok to Xi'an on November 29. Ms Wu said she complained in English to the hostess, who was said to be Thai, but the hostess said nothing could be done because 'they are all Chinese,' reported the\u00a0People's Daily Online. According to Ms Wu, as soon as they got on the plane, the passenger, who remains unidentified, took her shoes and socks off and put up her feet on the armrest in front of her.\n\n  - Ms Wu, from China, was flying\u00a0from Bangkok to Xi'an when event occurred.\n  - Claimed her rear passenger put up bare feet\u00a0as soon as they boarded.\n  - Hostess\u00a0allegedly\u00a0said nothing could be done as 'they are all Chinese'.\n", "  - This is not the first time a Chinese passenger has caused a stir during a flight."], ["A Chinese woman said she endured the worst flight of her life when her armrest was occupied by the bare feet of a fellow passenger  for four hours. The woman, named Ms Wu, said her rear passenger, who is allegedly also Chinese, reached out from behind and rested her feet on her chair during the AirAsia flight FD588 from Bangkok to Xi'an on November 29. Ms Wu said she complained in English to the hostess, who was said to be Thai, but the hostess said nothing could be done because 'they are all Chinese,' reported the\u00a0People's Daily Online. According to Ms Wu, as soon as they got on the plane, the passenger, who remains unidentified, took her shoes and socks off and put up her feet on the armrest in front of her.\n\n  - Ms Wu, from China, was flying\u00a0from Bangkok to Xi'an when event occurred.\n  - Claimed her rear passenger put up bare feet\u00a0as soon as they boarded.\n  - Hostess\u00a0allegedly\u00a0said nothing could be done as 'they are all Chinese'.\n", "  - This is not the first time a English passenger has caused a stir during a flight."], ["A Chinese woman said she endured the worst flight of her life when her armrest was occupied by the bare feet of a fellow passenger  for four hours. The woman, named Ms Wu, said her rear passenger, who is allegedly also Chinese, reached out from behind and rested her feet on her chair during the AirAsia flight FD588 from Bangkok to Xi'an on November 29. Ms Wu said she complained in English to the hostess, who was said to be Thai, but the hostess said nothing could be done because 'they are all Chinese,' reported the\u00a0People's Daily Online. According to Ms Wu, as soon as they got on the plane, the passenger, who remains unidentified, took her shoes and socks off and put up her feet on the armrest in front of her.\n\n  - Ms Wu, from China, was flying\u00a0from Bangkok to Xi'an when event occurred.\n  - Claimed her rear passenger put up bare feet\u00a0as soon as they boarded.\n  - Hostess\u00a0allegedly\u00a0said nothing could be done as 'they are all Chinese'.\n", "  - This is not the first time a Hostess passenger has caused a stir during a flight."], ["A Chinese woman said she endured the worst flight of her life when her armrest was occupied by the bare feet of a fellow passenger  for four hours. The woman, named Ms Wu, said her rear passenger, who is allegedly also Chinese, reached out from behind and rested her feet on her chair during the AirAsia flight FD588 from Bangkok to Xi'an on November 29. Ms Wu said she complained in English to the hostess, who was said to be Thai, but the hostess said nothing could be done because 'they are all Chinese,' reported the\u00a0People's Daily Online. According to Ms Wu, as soon as they got on the plane, the passenger, who remains unidentified, took her shoes and socks off and put up her feet on the armrest in front of her.\n\n  - Ms Wu, from China, was flying\u00a0from Bangkok to Xi'an when event occurred.\n  - Claimed her rear passenger put up bare feet\u00a0as soon as they boarded.\n  - Hostess\u00a0allegedly\u00a0said nothing could be done as 'they are all Chinese'.\n", "  - This is not the first time a People's Daily Online passenger has caused a stir during a flight."], ["A Chinese woman said she endured the worst flight of her life when her armrest was occupied by the bare feet of a fellow passenger  for four hours. The woman, named Ms Wu, said her rear passenger, who is allegedly also Chinese, reached out from behind and rested her feet on her chair during the AirAsia flight FD588 from Bangkok to Xi'an on November 29. Ms Wu said she complained in English to the hostess, who was said to be Thai, but the hostess said nothing could be done because 'they are all Chinese,' reported the\u00a0People's Daily Online. According to Ms Wu, as soon as they got on the plane, the passenger, who remains unidentified, took her shoes and socks off and put up her feet on the armrest in front of her.\n\n  - Ms Wu, from China, was flying\u00a0from Bangkok to Xi'an when event occurred.\n  - Claimed her rear passenger put up bare feet\u00a0as soon as they boarded.\n  - Hostess\u00a0allegedly\u00a0said nothing could be done as 'they are all Chinese'.\n", "  - This is not the first time a Thai passenger has caused a stir during a flight."], ["A Chinese woman said she endured the worst flight of her life when her armrest was occupied by the bare feet of a fellow passenger  for four hours. The woman, named Ms Wu, said her rear passenger, who is allegedly also Chinese, reached out from behind and rested her feet on her chair during the AirAsia flight FD588 from Bangkok to Xi'an on November 29. Ms Wu said she complained in English to the hostess, who was said to be Thai, but the hostess said nothing could be done because 'they are all Chinese,' reported the\u00a0People's Daily Online. According to Ms Wu, as soon as they got on the plane, the passenger, who remains unidentified, took her shoes and socks off and put up her feet on the armrest in front of her.\n\n  - Ms Wu, from China, was flying\u00a0from Bangkok to Xi'an when event occurred.\n  - Claimed her rear passenger put up bare feet\u00a0as soon as they boarded.\n  - Hostess\u00a0allegedly\u00a0said nothing could be done as 'they are all Chinese'.\n", "  - This is not the first time a Wu passenger has caused a stir during a flight."], ["A Chinese woman said she endured the worst flight of her life when her armrest was occupied by the bare feet of a fellow passenger  for four hours. The woman, named Ms Wu, said her rear passenger, who is allegedly also Chinese, reached out from behind and rested her feet on her chair during the AirAsia flight FD588 from Bangkok to Xi'an on November 29. Ms Wu said she complained in English to the hostess, who was said to be Thai, but the hostess said nothing could be done because 'they are all Chinese,' reported the\u00a0People's Daily Online. According to Ms Wu, as soon as they got on the plane, the passenger, who remains unidentified, took her shoes and socks off and put up her feet on the armrest in front of her.\n\n  - Ms Wu, from China, was flying\u00a0from Bangkok to Xi'an when event occurred.\n  - Claimed her rear passenger put up bare feet\u00a0as soon as they boarded.\n  - Hostess\u00a0allegedly\u00a0said nothing could be done as 'they are all Chinese'.\n", "  - This is not the first time a Xi'an passenger has caused a stir during a flight."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Bill passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the CNN passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Colorado passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Colorado Springs passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Controlled Substances Act passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Cox passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Georgia passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Haleigh passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the House of Representatives passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Janea Cox passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Macon passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the Scott Perry passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the THC passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["(CNN)Doctors in Macon, Georgia, told Janea Cox that her daughter, Haleigh, might not live another three months. That was the middle of March, when Haleigh's brain was being short-circuited by hundreds of seizures a day, overrunning the array of five potent drugs meant to control them. Worse, the drugs were damaging Haleigh's organs. \"She was maxed out,\" Cox said. \"She'd quit breathing several times a day, and the doctors blamed it on the seizure medications.\" Cox had heard that a form of medical marijuana might help, but it wasn't available in central Georgia. So a week after hearing the ominous diagnosis, she and Haleigh packed up and moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. There, Haleigh began a regimen of cannabis oil: four times a day and once at night.\n\n  - Charlotte's Web Medical Hemp Act of 2014 would amend Controlled Substances Act.\n  - Federal bill introduced in U.S. House of Representatives by Rep. Scott Perry.\n  - Bill would exempt plants with low percentage of THC, chemical that makes users high.\n", "  - This month, the U.S. passed a bill allowing banks to handle cash proceeds from dispensaries and other legal marijuana businesses."], ["This is the incredible moment a hotel worker chased the Tunisian gunman moments after he slaughtered 38 innocent tourists including 18 Britons. The unnamed man, who filmed the end of the massacre on his phone, can be seen running after Seifeddine Rezgui as the ISIS militant selects his targets. At one point he even picks up what appears to be a bottle of olive oil as he attempts to sneak up behind the 23-year-old assassin to disarm him. The 11-minute video was released as it emerged the number of Britons killed in Sousse on Friday could reach 30. It also came as Tunisia made its first arrests in connection with the terror attack.\n\n  - Unnamed worker filmed the end of the gunman's rampage on his phone.\n  - Follows Seifeddine Rezgui through the hotel grounds and up the beach.\n  - Video released as it was revealed British death toll could reach up to 30.\n  - Group of suspects arrested on Monday, the country's interior minister said.\n", "  - Speaking this afternoon, he announced a national moment of silence to be held in honour of British tourists at noon on Friday."], ["This is the incredible moment a hotel worker chased the Tunisian gunman moments after he slaughtered 38 innocent tourists including 18 Britons. The unnamed man, who filmed the end of the massacre on his phone, can be seen running after Seifeddine Rezgui as the ISIS militant selects his targets. At one point he even picks up what appears to be a bottle of olive oil as he attempts to sneak up behind the 23-year-old assassin to disarm him. The 11-minute video was released as it emerged the number of Britons killed in Sousse on Friday could reach 30. It also came as Tunisia made its first arrests in connection with the terror attack.\n\n  - Unnamed worker filmed the end of the gunman's rampage on his phone.\n  - Follows Seifeddine Rezgui through the hotel grounds and up the beach.\n  - Video released as it was revealed British death toll could reach up to 30.\n  - Group of suspects arrested on Monday, the country's interior minister said.\n", "  - Speaking this afternoon, he announced a national moment of silence to be held in honour of Britons tourists at noon on Friday."], ["This is the incredible moment a hotel worker chased the Tunisian gunman moments after he slaughtered 38 innocent tourists including 18 Britons. The unnamed man, who filmed the end of the massacre on his phone, can be seen running after Seifeddine Rezgui as the ISIS militant selects his targets. At one point he even picks up what appears to be a bottle of olive oil as he attempts to sneak up behind the 23-year-old assassin to disarm him. The 11-minute video was released as it emerged the number of Britons killed in Sousse on Friday could reach 30. It also came as Tunisia made its first arrests in connection with the terror attack.\n\n  - Unnamed worker filmed the end of the gunman's rampage on his phone.\n  - Follows Seifeddine Rezgui through the hotel grounds and up the beach.\n  - Video released as it was revealed British death toll could reach up to 30.\n  - Group of suspects arrested on Monday, the country's interior minister said.\n", "  - Speaking this afternoon, he announced a national moment of silence to be held in honour of ISIS tourists at noon on Friday."], ["This is the incredible moment a hotel worker chased the Tunisian gunman moments after he slaughtered 38 innocent tourists including 18 Britons. The unnamed man, who filmed the end of the massacre on his phone, can be seen running after Seifeddine Rezgui as the ISIS militant selects his targets. At one point he even picks up what appears to be a bottle of olive oil as he attempts to sneak up behind the 23-year-old assassin to disarm him. The 11-minute video was released as it emerged the number of Britons killed in Sousse on Friday could reach 30. It also came as Tunisia made its first arrests in connection with the terror attack.\n\n  - Unnamed worker filmed the end of the gunman's rampage on his phone.\n  - Follows Seifeddine Rezgui through the hotel grounds and up the beach.\n  - Video released as it was revealed British death toll could reach up to 30.\n  - Group of suspects arrested on Monday, the country's interior minister said.\n", "  - Speaking this afternoon, he announced a national moment of silence to be held in honour of Seifeddine Rezgui tourists at noon on Friday."], ["This is the incredible moment a hotel worker chased the Tunisian gunman moments after he slaughtered 38 innocent tourists including 18 Britons. The unnamed man, who filmed the end of the massacre on his phone, can be seen running after Seifeddine Rezgui as the ISIS militant selects his targets. At one point he even picks up what appears to be a bottle of olive oil as he attempts to sneak up behind the 23-year-old assassin to disarm him. The 11-minute video was released as it emerged the number of Britons killed in Sousse on Friday could reach 30. It also came as Tunisia made its first arrests in connection with the terror attack.\n\n  - Unnamed worker filmed the end of the gunman's rampage on his phone.\n  - Follows Seifeddine Rezgui through the hotel grounds and up the beach.\n  - Video released as it was revealed British death toll could reach up to 30.\n  - Group of suspects arrested on Monday, the country's interior minister said.\n", "  - Speaking this afternoon, he announced a national moment of silence to be held in honour of Sousse tourists at noon on Friday."], ["This is the incredible moment a hotel worker chased the Tunisian gunman moments after he slaughtered 38 innocent tourists including 18 Britons. The unnamed man, who filmed the end of the massacre on his phone, can be seen running after Seifeddine Rezgui as the ISIS militant selects his targets. At one point he even picks up what appears to be a bottle of olive oil as he attempts to sneak up behind the 23-year-old assassin to disarm him. The 11-minute video was released as it emerged the number of Britons killed in Sousse on Friday could reach 30. It also came as Tunisia made its first arrests in connection with the terror attack.\n\n  - Unnamed worker filmed the end of the gunman's rampage on his phone.\n  - Follows Seifeddine Rezgui through the hotel grounds and up the beach.\n  - Video released as it was revealed British death toll could reach up to 30.\n  - Group of suspects arrested on Monday, the country's interior minister said.\n", "  - Speaking this afternoon, he announced a national moment of silence to be held in honour of Tunisia tourists at noon on Friday."], ["This is the incredible moment a hotel worker chased the Tunisian gunman moments after he slaughtered 38 innocent tourists including 18 Britons. The unnamed man, who filmed the end of the massacre on his phone, can be seen running after Seifeddine Rezgui as the ISIS militant selects his targets. At one point he even picks up what appears to be a bottle of olive oil as he attempts to sneak up behind the 23-year-old assassin to disarm him. The 11-minute video was released as it emerged the number of Britons killed in Sousse on Friday could reach 30. It also came as Tunisia made its first arrests in connection with the terror attack.\n\n  - Unnamed worker filmed the end of the gunman's rampage on his phone.\n  - Follows Seifeddine Rezgui through the hotel grounds and up the beach.\n  - Video released as it was revealed British death toll could reach up to 30.\n  - Group of suspects arrested on Monday, the country's interior minister said.\n", "  - Speaking this afternoon, he announced a national moment of silence to be held in honour of Tunisian tourists at noon on Friday."], ["This is the incredible moment a hotel worker chased the Tunisian gunman moments after he slaughtered 38 innocent tourists including 18 Britons. The unnamed man, who filmed the end of the massacre on his phone, can be seen running after Seifeddine Rezgui as the ISIS militant selects his targets. At one point he even picks up what appears to be a bottle of olive oil as he attempts to sneak up behind the 23-year-old assassin to disarm him. The 11-minute video was released as it emerged the number of Britons killed in Sousse on Friday could reach 30. It also came as Tunisia made its first arrests in connection with the terror attack.\n\n  - Unnamed worker filmed the end of the gunman's rampage on his phone.\n  - Follows Seifeddine Rezgui through the hotel grounds and up the beach.\n  - Video released as it was revealed British death toll could reach up to 30.\n  - Group of suspects arrested on Monday, the country's interior minister said.\n", "  - Speaking this afternoon, he announced a national moment of silence to be held in honour of Unnamed tourists at noon on Friday."], ["Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has had a giggle at Education Minister Christopher Pyne\u2019s expense after Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed her the Star Wars parody video featuring Pyne\u2019s now infamous \u2018I\u2019m a fixer' line. Stefanovic introduced the clip called 'Star Wars: Fixed', which superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer and blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from the beloved movie franchise, by asking \u2018what\u2019s going on with Christopher Pyne? He\u2019s gone to the dark side, Mr Fix It\u2019. \u2018You may not be aware of this but he\u2019s been hired for his specialist skills by an unlikely source,\u2019 Stefanovic joked.\n\n  - Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed Julie Bishop the parody video.\n  - He joked Christopher Pyne had 'gone to the dark side'.\n  - The video superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer.\n  - It\u00a0blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from Star Wars.\n  - Bishop saw the funny side to the clip which first aired on Sunday night.\n", "  - Bishop watched the parody, in which Pyne is heard pledging 'I'm a fixer, I've fixed it'"], ["Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has had a giggle at Education Minister Christopher Pyne\u2019s expense after Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed her the Star Wars parody video featuring Pyne\u2019s now infamous \u2018I\u2019m a fixer' line. Stefanovic introduced the clip called 'Star Wars: Fixed', which superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer and blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from the beloved movie franchise, by asking \u2018what\u2019s going on with Christopher Pyne? He\u2019s gone to the dark side, Mr Fix It\u2019. \u2018You may not be aware of this but he\u2019s been hired for his specialist skills by an unlikely source,\u2019 Stefanovic joked.\n\n  - Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed Julie Bishop the parody video.\n  - He joked Christopher Pyne had 'gone to the dark side'.\n  - The video superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer.\n  - It\u00a0blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from Star Wars.\n  - Bishop saw the funny side to the clip which first aired on Sunday night.\n", "  - Christopher Pyne watched the parody, in which Pyne is heard pledging 'I'm a fixer, I've fixed it'"], ["Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has had a giggle at Education Minister Christopher Pyne\u2019s expense after Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed her the Star Wars parody video featuring Pyne\u2019s now infamous \u2018I\u2019m a fixer' line. Stefanovic introduced the clip called 'Star Wars: Fixed', which superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer and blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from the beloved movie franchise, by asking \u2018what\u2019s going on with Christopher Pyne? He\u2019s gone to the dark side, Mr Fix It\u2019. \u2018You may not be aware of this but he\u2019s been hired for his specialist skills by an unlikely source,\u2019 Stefanovic joked.\n\n  - Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed Julie Bishop the parody video.\n  - He joked Christopher Pyne had 'gone to the dark side'.\n  - The video superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer.\n  - It\u00a0blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from Star Wars.\n  - Bishop saw the funny side to the clip which first aired on Sunday night.\n", "  - Julie Bishop watched the parody, in which Pyne is heard pledging 'I'm a fixer, I've fixed it'"], ["Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has had a giggle at Education Minister Christopher Pyne\u2019s expense after Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed her the Star Wars parody video featuring Pyne\u2019s now infamous \u2018I\u2019m a fixer' line. Stefanovic introduced the clip called 'Star Wars: Fixed', which superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer and blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from the beloved movie franchise, by asking \u2018what\u2019s going on with Christopher Pyne? He\u2019s gone to the dark side, Mr Fix It\u2019. \u2018You may not be aware of this but he\u2019s been hired for his specialist skills by an unlikely source,\u2019 Stefanovic joked.\n\n  - Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed Julie Bishop the parody video.\n  - He joked Christopher Pyne had 'gone to the dark side'.\n  - The video superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer.\n  - It\u00a0blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from Star Wars.\n  - Bishop saw the funny side to the clip which first aired on Sunday night.\n", "  - Karl Stefanovic watched the parody, in which Pyne is heard pledging 'I'm a fixer, I've fixed it'"], ["Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has had a giggle at Education Minister Christopher Pyne\u2019s expense after Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed her the Star Wars parody video featuring Pyne\u2019s now infamous \u2018I\u2019m a fixer' line. Stefanovic introduced the clip called 'Star Wars: Fixed', which superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer and blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from the beloved movie franchise, by asking \u2018what\u2019s going on with Christopher Pyne? He\u2019s gone to the dark side, Mr Fix It\u2019. \u2018You may not be aware of this but he\u2019s been hired for his specialist skills by an unlikely source,\u2019 Stefanovic joked.\n\n  - Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed Julie Bishop the parody video.\n  - He joked Christopher Pyne had 'gone to the dark side'.\n  - The video superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer.\n  - It\u00a0blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from Star Wars.\n  - Bishop saw the funny side to the clip which first aired on Sunday night.\n", "  - Pyne watched the parody, in which Pyne is heard pledging 'I'm a fixer, I've fixed it'"], ["Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has had a giggle at Education Minister Christopher Pyne\u2019s expense after Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed her the Star Wars parody video featuring Pyne\u2019s now infamous \u2018I\u2019m a fixer' line. Stefanovic introduced the clip called 'Star Wars: Fixed', which superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer and blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from the beloved movie franchise, by asking \u2018what\u2019s going on with Christopher Pyne? He\u2019s gone to the dark side, Mr Fix It\u2019. \u2018You may not be aware of this but he\u2019s been hired for his specialist skills by an unlikely source,\u2019 Stefanovic joked.\n\n  - Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed Julie Bishop the parody video.\n  - He joked Christopher Pyne had 'gone to the dark side'.\n  - The video superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer.\n  - It\u00a0blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from Star Wars.\n  - Bishop saw the funny side to the clip which first aired on Sunday night.\n", "  - Sky News watched the parody, in which Pyne is heard pledging 'I'm a fixer, I've fixed it'"], ["Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has had a giggle at Education Minister Christopher Pyne\u2019s expense after Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed her the Star Wars parody video featuring Pyne\u2019s now infamous \u2018I\u2019m a fixer' line. Stefanovic introduced the clip called 'Star Wars: Fixed', which superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer and blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from the beloved movie franchise, by asking \u2018what\u2019s going on with Christopher Pyne? He\u2019s gone to the dark side, Mr Fix It\u2019. \u2018You may not be aware of this but he\u2019s been hired for his specialist skills by an unlikely source,\u2019 Stefanovic joked.\n\n  - Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed Julie Bishop the parody video.\n  - He joked Christopher Pyne had 'gone to the dark side'.\n  - The video superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer.\n  - It\u00a0blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from Star Wars.\n  - Bishop saw the funny side to the clip which first aired on Sunday night.\n", "  - Star Wars watched the parody, in which Pyne is heard pledging 'I'm a fixer, I've fixed it'"], ["Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has had a giggle at Education Minister Christopher Pyne\u2019s expense after Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed her the Star Wars parody video featuring Pyne\u2019s now infamous \u2018I\u2019m a fixer' line. Stefanovic introduced the clip called 'Star Wars: Fixed', which superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer and blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from the beloved movie franchise, by asking \u2018what\u2019s going on with Christopher Pyne? He\u2019s gone to the dark side, Mr Fix It\u2019. \u2018You may not be aware of this but he\u2019s been hired for his specialist skills by an unlikely source,\u2019 Stefanovic joked.\n\n  - Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed Julie Bishop the parody video.\n  - He joked Christopher Pyne had 'gone to the dark side'.\n  - The video superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer.\n  - It\u00a0blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from Star Wars.\n  - Bishop saw the funny side to the clip which first aired on Sunday night.\n", "  - Stefanovic watched the parody, in which Pyne is heard pledging 'I'm a fixer, I've fixed it'"], ["Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has had a giggle at Education Minister Christopher Pyne\u2019s expense after Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed her the Star Wars parody video featuring Pyne\u2019s now infamous \u2018I\u2019m a fixer' line. Stefanovic introduced the clip called 'Star Wars: Fixed', which superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer and blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from the beloved movie franchise, by asking \u2018what\u2019s going on with Christopher Pyne? He\u2019s gone to the dark side, Mr Fix It\u2019. \u2018You may not be aware of this but he\u2019s been hired for his specialist skills by an unlikely source,\u2019 Stefanovic joked.\n\n  - Today Show host Karl Stefanovic showed Julie Bishop the parody video.\n  - He joked Christopher Pyne had 'gone to the dark side'.\n  - The video superimposes Pyne's head onto the body of a imperial officer.\n  - It\u00a0blends his recent Sky News interview with a scene from Star Wars.\n  - Bishop saw the funny side to the clip which first aired on Sunday night.\n", "  - Today Show watched the parody, in which Pyne is heard pledging 'I'm a fixer, I've fixed it'"], ["The hit and run driver who killed a man in a wheelchair crossing the street has surrendered himself to police after realizing that he was family to the dead pedestrian. Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, \u00a0surrendered himself to authorities hours after hitting his relative Michael Wright, 48, while driving his Kia Optima on a suspended license. 'I think I killed my family member,' Clyburn said after turning himself in just after midnight on Thursday. Officer Kevin Schafer said that the young man would have faced a misdemeanor for driving on a suspended license, but now will be charged with a felony for leaving the scene of an accident causing death.\n\n  - Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, turned himself in after deadly crash.\n  - His relative Michael Wright, 48, was crossing the street when he was hit.\n  - Driver on suspended license didn't slow down and sped away from scene.\n  - He didn't break traffic laws during incident, but now faces felony charge.\n", "  - Clyburn died from his injuries at the hospital early Wednesday morning."], ["The hit and run driver who killed a man in a wheelchair crossing the street has surrendered himself to police after realizing that he was family to the dead pedestrian. Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, \u00a0surrendered himself to authorities hours after hitting his relative Michael Wright, 48, while driving his Kia Optima on a suspended license. 'I think I killed my family member,' Clyburn said after turning himself in just after midnight on Thursday. Officer Kevin Schafer said that the young man would have faced a misdemeanor for driving on a suspended license, but now will be charged with a felony for leaving the scene of an accident causing death.\n\n  - Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, turned himself in after deadly crash.\n  - His relative Michael Wright, 48, was crossing the street when he was hit.\n  - Driver on suspended license didn't slow down and sped away from scene.\n  - He didn't break traffic laws during incident, but now faces felony charge.\n", "  - Florida died from his injuries at the hospital early Wednesday morning."], ["The hit and run driver who killed a man in a wheelchair crossing the street has surrendered himself to police after realizing that he was family to the dead pedestrian. Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, \u00a0surrendered himself to authorities hours after hitting his relative Michael Wright, 48, while driving his Kia Optima on a suspended license. 'I think I killed my family member,' Clyburn said after turning himself in just after midnight on Thursday. Officer Kevin Schafer said that the young man would have faced a misdemeanor for driving on a suspended license, but now will be charged with a felony for leaving the scene of an accident causing death.\n\n  - Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, turned himself in after deadly crash.\n  - His relative Michael Wright, 48, was crossing the street when he was hit.\n  - Driver on suspended license didn't slow down and sped away from scene.\n  - He didn't break traffic laws during incident, but now faces felony charge.\n", "  - Kevin Schafer died from his injuries at the hospital early Wednesday morning."], ["The hit and run driver who killed a man in a wheelchair crossing the street has surrendered himself to police after realizing that he was family to the dead pedestrian. Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, \u00a0surrendered himself to authorities hours after hitting his relative Michael Wright, 48, while driving his Kia Optima on a suspended license. 'I think I killed my family member,' Clyburn said after turning himself in just after midnight on Thursday. Officer Kevin Schafer said that the young man would have faced a misdemeanor for driving on a suspended license, but now will be charged with a felony for leaving the scene of an accident causing death.\n\n  - Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, turned himself in after deadly crash.\n  - His relative Michael Wright, 48, was crossing the street when he was hit.\n  - Driver on suspended license didn't slow down and sped away from scene.\n  - He didn't break traffic laws during incident, but now faces felony charge.\n", "  - Kia Optima died from his injuries at the hospital early Wednesday morning."], ["The hit and run driver who killed a man in a wheelchair crossing the street has surrendered himself to police after realizing that he was family to the dead pedestrian. Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, \u00a0surrendered himself to authorities hours after hitting his relative Michael Wright, 48, while driving his Kia Optima on a suspended license. 'I think I killed my family member,' Clyburn said after turning himself in just after midnight on Thursday. Officer Kevin Schafer said that the young man would have faced a misdemeanor for driving on a suspended license, but now will be charged with a felony for leaving the scene of an accident causing death.\n\n  - Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, turned himself in after deadly crash.\n  - His relative Michael Wright, 48, was crossing the street when he was hit.\n  - Driver on suspended license didn't slow down and sped away from scene.\n  - He didn't break traffic laws during incident, but now faces felony charge.\n", "  - Malik Clyburn died from his injuries at the hospital early Wednesday morning."], ["The hit and run driver who killed a man in a wheelchair crossing the street has surrendered himself to police after realizing that he was family to the dead pedestrian. Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, \u00a0surrendered himself to authorities hours after hitting his relative Michael Wright, 48, while driving his Kia Optima on a suspended license. 'I think I killed my family member,' Clyburn said after turning himself in just after midnight on Thursday. Officer Kevin Schafer said that the young man would have faced a misdemeanor for driving on a suspended license, but now will be charged with a felony for leaving the scene of an accident causing death.\n\n  - Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, turned himself in after deadly crash.\n  - His relative Michael Wright, 48, was crossing the street when he was hit.\n  - Driver on suspended license didn't slow down and sped away from scene.\n  - He didn't break traffic laws during incident, but now faces felony charge.\n", "  - Michael Wright died from his injuries at the hospital early Wednesday morning."], ["The hit and run driver who killed a man in a wheelchair crossing the street has surrendered himself to police after realizing that he was family to the dead pedestrian. Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, \u00a0surrendered himself to authorities hours after hitting his relative Michael Wright, 48, while driving his Kia Optima on a suspended license. 'I think I killed my family member,' Clyburn said after turning himself in just after midnight on Thursday. Officer Kevin Schafer said that the young man would have faced a misdemeanor for driving on a suspended license, but now will be charged with a felony for leaving the scene of an accident causing death.\n\n  - Malik Clyburn, 19, of Sarasota, Florida, turned himself in after deadly crash.\n  - His relative Michael Wright, 48, was crossing the street when he was hit.\n  - Driver on suspended license didn't slow down and sped away from scene.\n  - He didn't break traffic laws during incident, but now faces felony charge.\n", "  - Sarasota died from his injuries at the hospital early Wednesday morning."], ["Barcelona's 1-0 La Liga victory against Celta Vigo on Sunday evening featured one of the most bizarre incidents of the season so far. With the score at 1-0 following Jeremy Mathieu's 73rd minute header, tempers flared between Celta striker Fabian Orellana and Sergio Busquets as the Barcelona midfielder attempted to waste time during the closing stages. Orellana remonstrated angrily with the match officials before grabbing a lump of grass from the floor and throwing it in the direction of Busquets. Fabian Orellana collects a lump of grass from the ground before throwing it towards Sergio Busquets The Celta Vigo striker aims his throw in Busquets' direction during the closing stages of the match\n\n  - Fabian Orellana was angered by Sergio Busquets' time-wasting tactics.\n  - Celta Vigo striker threw lump of turf towards the Barcelona star.\n  - Barcelona needed a Jeremy Mathieu header to earn 1-0 win.\n", "  - As seems to be the midfielder's nature, Barcelona made the most of the incident, grabbing his eye despite the clutch of turf clearly striking him on the neck."], ["Barcelona's 1-0 La Liga victory against Celta Vigo on Sunday evening featured one of the most bizarre incidents of the season so far. With the score at 1-0 following Jeremy Mathieu's 73rd minute header, tempers flared between Celta striker Fabian Orellana and Sergio Busquets as the Barcelona midfielder attempted to waste time during the closing stages. Orellana remonstrated angrily with the match officials before grabbing a lump of grass from the floor and throwing it in the direction of Busquets. Fabian Orellana collects a lump of grass from the ground before throwing it towards Sergio Busquets The Celta Vigo striker aims his throw in Busquets' direction during the closing stages of the match\n\n  - Fabian Orellana was angered by Sergio Busquets' time-wasting tactics.\n  - Celta Vigo striker threw lump of turf towards the Barcelona star.\n  - Barcelona needed a Jeremy Mathieu header to earn 1-0 win.\n", "  - As seems to be the midfielder's nature, Busquets made the most of the incident, grabbing his eye despite the clutch of turf clearly striking him on the neck."], ["Barcelona's 1-0 La Liga victory against Celta Vigo on Sunday evening featured one of the most bizarre incidents of the season so far. With the score at 1-0 following Jeremy Mathieu's 73rd minute header, tempers flared between Celta striker Fabian Orellana and Sergio Busquets as the Barcelona midfielder attempted to waste time during the closing stages. Orellana remonstrated angrily with the match officials before grabbing a lump of grass from the floor and throwing it in the direction of Busquets. Fabian Orellana collects a lump of grass from the ground before throwing it towards Sergio Busquets The Celta Vigo striker aims his throw in Busquets' direction during the closing stages of the match\n\n  - Fabian Orellana was angered by Sergio Busquets' time-wasting tactics.\n  - Celta Vigo striker threw lump of turf towards the Barcelona star.\n  - Barcelona needed a Jeremy Mathieu header to earn 1-0 win.\n", "  - As seems to be the midfielder's nature, Celta made the most of the incident, grabbing his eye despite the clutch of turf clearly striking him on the neck."], ["Barcelona's 1-0 La Liga victory against Celta Vigo on Sunday evening featured one of the most bizarre incidents of the season so far. With the score at 1-0 following Jeremy Mathieu's 73rd minute header, tempers flared between Celta striker Fabian Orellana and Sergio Busquets as the Barcelona midfielder attempted to waste time during the closing stages. Orellana remonstrated angrily with the match officials before grabbing a lump of grass from the floor and throwing it in the direction of Busquets. Fabian Orellana collects a lump of grass from the ground before throwing it towards Sergio Busquets The Celta Vigo striker aims his throw in Busquets' direction during the closing stages of the match\n\n  - Fabian Orellana was angered by Sergio Busquets' time-wasting tactics.\n  - Celta Vigo striker threw lump of turf towards the Barcelona star.\n  - Barcelona needed a Jeremy Mathieu header to earn 1-0 win.\n", "  - As seems to be the midfielder's nature, Celta Vigo made the most of the incident, grabbing his eye despite the clutch of turf clearly striking him on the neck."], ["Barcelona's 1-0 La Liga victory against Celta Vigo on Sunday evening featured one of the most bizarre incidents of the season so far. With the score at 1-0 following Jeremy Mathieu's 73rd minute header, tempers flared between Celta striker Fabian Orellana and Sergio Busquets as the Barcelona midfielder attempted to waste time during the closing stages. Orellana remonstrated angrily with the match officials before grabbing a lump of grass from the floor and throwing it in the direction of Busquets. Fabian Orellana collects a lump of grass from the ground before throwing it towards Sergio Busquets The Celta Vigo striker aims his throw in Busquets' direction during the closing stages of the match\n\n  - Fabian Orellana was angered by Sergio Busquets' time-wasting tactics.\n  - Celta Vigo striker threw lump of turf towards the Barcelona star.\n  - Barcelona needed a Jeremy Mathieu header to earn 1-0 win.\n", "  - As seems to be the midfielder's nature, Fabian Orellana made the most of the incident, grabbing his eye despite the clutch of turf clearly striking him on the neck."], ["Barcelona's 1-0 La Liga victory against Celta Vigo on Sunday evening featured one of the most bizarre incidents of the season so far. With the score at 1-0 following Jeremy Mathieu's 73rd minute header, tempers flared between Celta striker Fabian Orellana and Sergio Busquets as the Barcelona midfielder attempted to waste time during the closing stages. Orellana remonstrated angrily with the match officials before grabbing a lump of grass from the floor and throwing it in the direction of Busquets. Fabian Orellana collects a lump of grass from the ground before throwing it towards Sergio Busquets The Celta Vigo striker aims his throw in Busquets' direction during the closing stages of the match\n\n  - Fabian Orellana was angered by Sergio Busquets' time-wasting tactics.\n  - Celta Vigo striker threw lump of turf towards the Barcelona star.\n  - Barcelona needed a Jeremy Mathieu header to earn 1-0 win.\n", "  - As seems to be the midfielder's nature, Jeremy Mathieu made the most of the incident, grabbing his eye despite the clutch of turf clearly striking him on the neck."], ["Barcelona's 1-0 La Liga victory against Celta Vigo on Sunday evening featured one of the most bizarre incidents of the season so far. With the score at 1-0 following Jeremy Mathieu's 73rd minute header, tempers flared between Celta striker Fabian Orellana and Sergio Busquets as the Barcelona midfielder attempted to waste time during the closing stages. Orellana remonstrated angrily with the match officials before grabbing a lump of grass from the floor and throwing it in the direction of Busquets. Fabian Orellana collects a lump of grass from the ground before throwing it towards Sergio Busquets The Celta Vigo striker aims his throw in Busquets' direction during the closing stages of the match\n\n  - Fabian Orellana was angered by Sergio Busquets' time-wasting tactics.\n  - Celta Vigo striker threw lump of turf towards the Barcelona star.\n  - Barcelona needed a Jeremy Mathieu header to earn 1-0 win.\n", "  - As seems to be the midfielder's nature, La Liga made the most of the incident, grabbing his eye despite the clutch of turf clearly striking him on the neck."], ["Barcelona's 1-0 La Liga victory against Celta Vigo on Sunday evening featured one of the most bizarre incidents of the season so far. With the score at 1-0 following Jeremy Mathieu's 73rd minute header, tempers flared between Celta striker Fabian Orellana and Sergio Busquets as the Barcelona midfielder attempted to waste time during the closing stages. Orellana remonstrated angrily with the match officials before grabbing a lump of grass from the floor and throwing it in the direction of Busquets. Fabian Orellana collects a lump of grass from the ground before throwing it towards Sergio Busquets The Celta Vigo striker aims his throw in Busquets' direction during the closing stages of the match\n\n  - Fabian Orellana was angered by Sergio Busquets' time-wasting tactics.\n  - Celta Vigo striker threw lump of turf towards the Barcelona star.\n  - Barcelona needed a Jeremy Mathieu header to earn 1-0 win.\n", "  - As seems to be the midfielder's nature, Orellana made the most of the incident, grabbing his eye despite the clutch of turf clearly striking him on the neck."], ["Barcelona's 1-0 La Liga victory against Celta Vigo on Sunday evening featured one of the most bizarre incidents of the season so far. With the score at 1-0 following Jeremy Mathieu's 73rd minute header, tempers flared between Celta striker Fabian Orellana and Sergio Busquets as the Barcelona midfielder attempted to waste time during the closing stages. Orellana remonstrated angrily with the match officials before grabbing a lump of grass from the floor and throwing it in the direction of Busquets. Fabian Orellana collects a lump of grass from the ground before throwing it towards Sergio Busquets The Celta Vigo striker aims his throw in Busquets' direction during the closing stages of the match\n\n  - Fabian Orellana was angered by Sergio Busquets' time-wasting tactics.\n  - Celta Vigo striker threw lump of turf towards the Barcelona star.\n  - Barcelona needed a Jeremy Mathieu header to earn 1-0 win.\n", "  - As seems to be the midfielder's nature, Sergio Busquets made the most of the incident, grabbing his eye despite the clutch of turf clearly striking him on the neck."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Americas's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Colombia's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Colombian's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Congress's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in FARC's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Juan Manuel Santos's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Nobel Peace Prize's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Norway's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Oslo's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Santos's civil war is still uncertain."], ["(CNN) Half his country may not support his efforts at peace, but Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos now has a Nobel Peace Prize for pursuing a deal to end the longest-running war in the Americas. Santos accepted his award Saturday after brokering a deal to stop the fighting in the 50-year conflict with the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, better known by its Spanish acronym, FARC. \"After six years of serious and often intense, difficult negotiations ... this agreement marks the beginning of the dismantling of an army and its conversion into a legal political movement,\" he said at the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.\n\n  - President Juan Manuel Santos honored for peace deal to end decades-long civil war.\n  - Colombia's Congress passed the deal after voters repudiated it in a referendum.\n", "  - But a path to peace in Spanish's civil war is still uncertain."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying CNN the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying Donald Trump the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying Florida the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying GOP the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying Grand Old Party the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying Hillary Clinton the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying Iowa the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying John McCain the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying Panama City the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying Paul Ryan the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying Republican Party the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying Steve King the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying Trump the speakership after the election."], ["Panama City, Florida (CNN) Donald Trump is tearing the Grand Old Party apart. The tension that has simmered in the Republican Party for years -- shutting down the government and nearly bringing the nation to default -- escalated into an outright civil war Tuesday. The conflict not only threatens the party's ability to make any realistic attempt at reclaiming the White House next month, but also previews the conflicts and divides that could consume the GOP for years to come if Trump loses. On one side is Trump, who spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes, such as Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, and lamenting the lack of party unity. He's backed by conservative lawmakers including Iowa Rep. Steve King and the throngs of loyal supporters who attend his rallies, including the one here in Panama City, Florida, Tuesday, where he renewed his call for a government investigation into his opponent, Hillary Clinton.\n\n  - Trump spent much of Tuesday lashing out on social media at his GOP foes.\n  - Trump's turn on his own party could prove counterproductive.\n", "  - Some are even raising the potential of denying White House the speakership after the election."]]