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Reverse Mortgages Change Lives. Watch Testimonials

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Security 1 Lending Calculate Rever)
Tue Mar 25 23:25:08 2014

Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2014 20:25:05 -0700
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@hmtserawruboff.us>
From: "Security 1 Lending Calculate Reverse" <Security1LendingCalculateReverse@hmtserawruboff.us>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu

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62 & Need Cash? Act Now Before Programs Change

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RENO, Nev.  Religious leaders and farmers in Nevada and Utah held 
special events to ask for divine intervention in delivering the West from 
drought.The plea to above comes weeks after the federal government declared 
parts of 11 parched Western and Central states natural disaster areas.Faith 
leaders prayed for snow and rain during a multifaith service Saturday in 
the Reno suburb of Sparks.The Utah Farm Bureau asked the public to 
join in prayer and fasting for moisture for livestock and crops as 
part of its Harvesting Faith event Sunday.Utah dairy farmer Ron Gibson told 
the Deseret News that farmers "can't go to the Legislature to ask 
for help, (so they instead) decided to go to the guy upstairs."Rajan 
Zed, who organized the Nevada service, says it drew Christian, Muslim, Hindu, 
Buddhist, Jewish and other faith leaders.
RENO, Nev.  Religious leaders and farmers in Nevada and Utah held 
special events to ask for divine intervention in delivering the West from 
drought.The plea to above comes weeks after the federal government declared 
parts of 11 parched Western and Central states natural disaster areas.Faith 
leaders prayed for snow and rain during a multifaith service Saturday in 
the Reno suburb of Sparks.The Utah Farm Bureau asked the public to 
join in prayer and fasting for moisture for livestock and crops as 
part of its Harvesting Faith event Sunday.Utah dairy farmer Ron Gibson told 
the Deseret News that farmers "can't go to the Legislature to ask 
for help, (so they instead) decided to go to the guy upstairs."Rajan 
Zed, who organized the Nevada service, says it drew Christian, Muslim, Hindu, 
Buddhist, Jewish and other faith leaders.


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<strong><center><a href="http://www.hmtserawruboff.us/l/lt1FF4667JWHLFJ268HVYFXP/630C1986SUC4165HV10MGM71675797KWK100621851"><H3>62 & Need Cash? Act Now Before Programs Change</a></H3></strong>
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	<td align="center">Are you a homeowner aged 62 older? <a href="http://www.hmtserawruboff.us/l/lt2UJ4667IUQPAC268MJNTSX/630P1986TDP4165JH10JGJ71675797QEV100621851">Watch this Video:</a><br><br></td>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">CARACAS, Venezuela  One of Venezuela's most-prominent opposition bloggers, 
whose English-language musings are a must-read for foreign journalists, 
academics and political junkies, is leaving his beat as a chronicler of 
the country's socialist revolution.Francisco Toro said that his decision 
to cut ties with the Caracas Chronicles blog he co-founded reflects the 
stagnation that has overtaken his homeland since former President Hugo Chavez's 
death last year and which makes the country less interesting to write 
about.When the blog began, in 2002, Chavez was a fast-rising, political 
maestro who craftily leveraged the world's largest oil reserves to rally 
anti-American sentiment in Latin America and other parts of the developing 
world. A decade later, in the hands of his less charismatic successor 
Nicolas Maduro, Toro says much of the revolution's influence has waned as 
the economy reels from widespread shortages, 50 percent inflation and a 
currency crisis."The truth is that like a lot of people I miss 
Chavez," Toro, who was also a frequent contributor to the New York 
Times, said in a telephone interview from his home in Montreal. "There's 
no real hemispheric dimension anymore. Venezuela is so clearly not a model 
that any sane person would want to emulate. It's just a local 
story of a country gone crazy."The blog's other founder, Chile-based Juan 
Cristobal Nagel, says the blog will soon be relaunched with new voices 
including more women and 
 h yellow pea protein, but without gluten or soy. 
Most beef alternatives now on the market include both.The process itself 
is high tech. Were taking proteins and running them through a heating, 
cooling and pressure process that realigns them so that they substantially 
mimic the fiber structure that you find in animal flesh or meat, 
Brown says.The outcome for the consumer is that it tears like meat, 
it has the same grams of force required to rupture and it 
has the overall mouthfeel of muscle, he said.Silicon Valley-based Hampton 
Creek, meanwhile, is focusing on its plant-based egg, created by taking 
the proteins and replicating what chicken eggs do on a molecular level. 
It aims to be a cheaper alternative, but just as tasty and 
just as good for you.From that we get insights about what works. 
Is it as good or better than a chicken egg in doing 
what a chicken egg does? says Josh Tetrick, the companys CEO.From that 
they created a mayonnaise replacement, Just Mayo, on sale at Whole Foods. 
It even comes in a chipotle flavor. Its next rollouts will be 
a scrambled egg substitute called Just Scrambled and a cookie dough called 
Eat the Dough.So how does this stuff taste? Some FoxNews.com reporters who 
got a sample of Eat the Dough and Just Mayo said they 
tasted pretty authentic.Writing in Wired Magazine about Beyond Meat, celebrity 
chef Alton Brown said this about the Chicken-Free Strips: My first thought 
was, 'If I were served this in a restaur
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