[13876] in linux-announce channel archive
Cut your ElectricBill Up To 80%
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Liberty Generatr)
Mon Jun 29 19:38:03 2015
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2015 16:38:01 -0700
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
From: "Liberty Generatr" <LibertyGeneratr@lassined.link>
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Cut your ElectricBill Up To 80%
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<span style="font-size: 9px ">109 E. 17th Suite 4552 - Cheyenne, WY 82001 </span>
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ared with Schwarzenegger during their 25-year marriage, TMZ reported.She is seeking spousal
support and requested Schwarzenegger pay her attorney's fees in what could be
one of the costliest celebrity divorces ever.
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LAS VEGAS Agustina Ocampo is the kind of foreign traveler businesses
salivate over.The 22-year-old Argentine recently dropped more than $5,000 on food, hotels
and clothes in Las Vegas during a trip that also took her
to Seattle's Space Needle, Disneyland and the San Diego Zoo. But she
doubts she will return soon."It is a little bit of a headache,"
said Ocampo, a student who waited months to find out whether her
tourist visa application would be approved.More than a decade after the federal
government strengthened travel requirements after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, foreign
visitors say getting a temporary visa remains a daunting and sometimes insurmountable
hurdle.The tourism industry hopes to change that with a campaign to persuade
Congress to overhaul the State Department's tourist visa application process."After 9/11, we
were all shaken and there was a real concern for security, and
I still think that concern exists," said Jim Evans, a former hot
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APShown here are former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, left, and former Massachusetts
Gov. Mitt Romney. WASHINGTON Newt Gingrich voiced enthusiasm for Mitt Romney's
Massachusetts health care law when it was passed five years ago, the
same plan he has been denouncing over the past few months as
he campaigned for the Republican presidential nomination."The health bill that Governor Romney
signed into law this month has tremendous potential to effect major change
in the American health system," said an April 2006 newsletter published by
Gingrich's former consulting company, the Center for Health Transformation.The two-page "Newt Notes"
analysis, found online by The Wall Street Journal even though it no
longer appears on the center's website, continued, "We agree entirely with Governor
Romney and Massachusetts legislators that our goal should be 100 percent insurance
coverage for all Americans."The earlier bullish comments about the Romney health care
plan are anothe
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y sites and urged the observers to insist on full access to
all sites used for detention.HRW's report, issued late Tuesday, echoes charges made
by Syrian opposition members that thousands of detainees were being transferred to
military sites ahead of the observers' visit.Syrian officials have said the Arab
League monitors will have unrestricted access to trouble spots but will not
be allowed to visit sensitive military sites."Syria has shown it will stop
at nothing to undermine independent monitoring of its crackdown," said Sarah Leah
Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. She said it was
essential for the Arab League "to draw clear lines" regarding access to
detainees, and be willing to speak out when those lines are crossed.SANA
said the prisoners released Wednesday did not include those with "blood on
their hands."Last month, Syrian authorities released 2,645 prisoners in three batches but
activists and critics say thousands more who were picked
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already nearly come to blows over oil fields in this disputed region.
In 2008, a 24-hour standoff developed between their respective security forces over
a section of an oil field in Kirkuk, an ethnically-mixed area the
Kurds want to annex.Baghad warns it could punish Exxon Mobil and that
the company's existing contracts could be in jeopardy. But so far it
has taken no punitive measures.Many analysts doubt that it will, considering Baghdad's
profound need for foreign investment.Outside the Kurdish zone, Exxon Mobil and Shell
are already developing one of Iraq's biggest oil fields, the 8.6 billion-barrel
West Qurna Stage 1 field in southern Basra province. Exxon Mobil is
also expected to lead a multibillion dollar project in Basra, a Shiite
stronghold, that will help make available the water needed for oil development.Baghdad's
oil policy is not a "long-term sustainable program that would attract foreign
capital into Iraq," said Fadel Gheit, chief economist with
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nd the product used, to improve safety and follow-up care.
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