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Stop wasting time baking potatoes

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Potato Express Reviews)
Fri Nov 15 20:33:40 2013

Date: Fri, 15 Nov 2013 17:33:41 -0800
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To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Potato Express Reviews" <PotatoExpressReviews@beestrgengambs.us>
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Quickly steam potatoes, corn, and bread in microwave

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A Home Depot store is seen in New York, August 18, 2008. 
Analysts are expecting Home Depot to report a second-quarter profit of 61 
cents a share on Tuesday, compared with 77 cents a year earlier, 
according to Reuters Estimates. The industry leader has said per-share earnings 
could fall as much as 24 percent this year.   REUTERS/Shannon 
Stapleton (UNITED STATES)ReutersA man in a suburban Los Angeles Home Depot 
Wednesday evening used saws normally used to slice sheet rock to cut 
both his arms down to the bone in front of several horrified 
customers, police said.The man, who was not immediately identified, suffered 
severe injuries. He was found in a pool of blood in the 
store's tool section. He had a slight pulse but was passing out 
as help arrived."People just couldn't believe it," Cpl. Rudy Lopez, with 
West Covina Police Department, told KNBC-TV. "He walked into the saw area, 
picked up a couple of saws in the saw area and started 
cutting both of his arms."An off-duty paramedic from the Pasadena Fire Department 
had been shopping nearby and hurried to the scene.- Cpl. Rudy Lopez, 
with West Covina Police Department"The officers had already found the man 
down, face down, blood all over the store, multiple aisles, and the 
whole store is in chaos," the paramedic, Art Hurtado, told KNBC-TV.Hurtado 
thought the man was dead but when he checked he found breath 
and a slight pulse and said he thought to himself, "I can 
save this guy."With help fro
North Korea's new leader is using the threat of a nuclear strike 
to get concessions on foreign aid rather than trying to trigger military 
conflict, top U.S. intelligence officials told Congress Thursday.Director 
of National Intelligence James Clapper told the House intelligence committee 
that he thinks new North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is trying 
to show the U.S., the world and his own people that he 
is "firmly in control in North Korea," while attempting to maneuver the 
international community into concessions in future negotiations."I don't 
think...he has much of an endgame other than to somehow elicit recognition," 
and to turn the nuclear threat into "negotiation and to accommodation and 
presumably for aid," Clapper said.Clapper said the intelligence community 
believes the North would only use nuclear weapons to preserve the Kim 
regime, but says they do not know how the regime defines that.Defense 
Secretary Chuck Hagel said at a different congressional hearing that he 
does not believe North Korea, nor Iran, have the technical ability to 
reach the continental U.S. with its nuclear weapons yet."Now does that mean 
that won't have it or they can't have it or they're not 
working on it?" Hagel said. "No. That's why this is a very 
dangerous situation."Joint Chiefs chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey, testifying 
with Hagel before the House Armed Services Committee, would not say whether 
North Korea has the capacity to arm a ballistic missile with 

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		<p>The Potato Express special design traps moisture and quickly steams potatoes, corn, and bread. Cook tender, delicious meals in just minutes.</p>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">ch everywhere but Caracas, the capital. Worsening power 
outages, crumbling infrastructure and other unfulfilled promises witnessed 
this week in a trip through the country's industrial heartland could be 
an important factor in Sunday's election to replace socialist President 
Hugo Chavez, who died last month after a long battle with cancer.His 
political heir, Nicolas Maduro, is favored to win, largely on the strength 
of Chavez's generous anti-poverty programs, which Chavez emphasized over 
public works with one big exception: housing.But polls show that support 
may be eroding and the outages are a testament to the neglect 
many Venezuelans consider inexcusable in this major oil-producing state. 
Violent crime, double-digit inflation, official corruption and persistent 
food shortages are other factors.Some of the rolling, intermittent blackouts 
are still scheduled. But most are no longer announced. They generally last 
three to four hours a day on average, said Miguel Lara, who 
ran the power grid until Chavez forced him out in 2004 for 
being "a political risk."Jose Aguilar, a U.S.-based consultant with extensive 
and more recent experience in Venezuela's electrical industry, says it is 
suffering "a downward spiral of deterioration." Insufficient transmission 
lines are running so hot that 20,000 distribution transformers burned out 
last year, he said. "They run them cherry red."Electrical substations are 
in a precarious state, Aguilar and Lara s
 Hazelwood fire fighters gather outside a home in Hazelwood  that was 
damaged by a storm  as the make a plan to enter 
and retrieve medicine for a resident who escaped the home on Wednesday, 
April 10, 2013. Butch Dye, a hydrometeorological technician with the National 
Weather Service in St. Louis, Mo., said severe weather struck the suburb 
of Hazelwood.  "We won't be able to confirm whether it was 
a tornado until teams get out there tomorrow," Dye said. (AP Photo/David 
Carson, Post-Dispatch)The Associated PressTwo men work to remove a truck 
in Botkinburg, Ark., Thursday, April 11, 2013, that was overturned when 
a severe storm struck the area late Wednesday. The National Weather Service 
is surveying areas Thursday to determine whether tornadoes or strong winds 
caused damage. (AP Photo/Danny Johnston)The Associated PressA tree that 
landed on the roof of Susan Strebeck's home in Hazelwood after a 
storm blew through the area causing extensive damage on Wednesday, April 
10, 2013. Butch Dye, a hydrometeorological technician with the National 
Weather Service in St. Louis, Mo., said severe weather struck the suburb 
of Hazelwood.  "We won't be able to confirm whether it was 
a tornado until teams get out there tomorrow," Dye said. (AP Photo/David 
Carson, Post-Dispatch)The Associated PressAimee Greenwalt (left) and Amanda 
Parish survey the damage in Hazelwood caused by a storm on Wednesday, 
April 10, 2013. Butch Dye, a hydrometeorological technician
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