[9850] in linux-announce channel archive
Your Chipotle Cravings Preview is Here
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Chipotle Savings Survey)
Sat Feb 22 12:33:10 2014
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From: "Chipotle Savings Survey" <ChipotleSavingsSurvey@tubnarafloat.com>
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Date: Sat, 22 Feb 2014 09:32:59 -0800
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Your Exclusive $25 Chipotle Gift Card Cravings Survey is Waiting
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PANAMA CITY Work on the ambitious Panama Canal expansion project has
halted after talks broke down on how to settle a dispute over
$1.6 billion in cost overruns.The canal's administrator says the stoppage
will give authorities time to analyze how to proceed on the project
to widen the canal.Jorge Quijano told a news conference Wednesday that "what
I want to make clear is that we will not yield to
blackmail."The Spanish-led construction consortium leading the expansion
says negotiations have broken down for how to finance the cost overrun.Spanish
firm Sacyr SA says 10,000 jobs are at risk. Italy's Impreglio
SpA construction firm is also in the consortium.The consortium and the Panama
Canal Authority blame each other for the overruns.
the world who are deeply religious, who get enriched by the
wonderful sense of community by their religion," said Nye, who wore his
trademark bow tie. "But these same people do not embrace the extraordinary
view that the Earth is somehow only 6,000 years old."The debate drew
a few Nye disciples in the audience, including Aaron Swomley, who wore
a red bowtie and white lab coat. Swomley said he was impressed
by Ham's presentation and the debate's respectful tone."I think they did
a good job outlining their own arguments without getting too heated, as
these debates tend to get," he said.Some scientists had been critical of
Nye for agreeing to debate the head of a Christian ministry that
is dismissive of evolution.Jerry Coyne, an evolution professor at the University
of Chicago, wrote on his blog that "Nye's appearance will be giving
money to organizations who try to subvert the mission Nye has had
all his life: science education, particularly of kids." Coyne pointed out
that the Creation Museum will be selling DVDs of the event.The debate
was hatched after Nye appeared in an online video in 2012 that
urged parents not to pass their religious-based doubts about evolution on
to their children. Ham rebutted Nye's statements with his own online video
and the two later agreed to share a stage.
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">DELRAY BEACH, Fla. A 6-foot-3, 250-pound naked man died after being
shot by a Palm Beach County Sheriff's sergeant when he attacked a
former New York City police officer, chased a man and his young
son and bit a man on the face.Sheriff Ric Bradshaw said at
a Tuesday night news conference that the man later died at a
hospital but it wasn't immediately clear whether he died from gunshot wounds
or from a medical condition.According to Bradshaw, the man was walking on
a street in Delray Beach when, for no apparent reason, he attacked
the 66-year-old retired officer. The man continued down the street, where
he chased a man and his 10-year-old son near the entrance to
a gated community.- Sheriff Ric BradshawBradshaw said the man then started
fighting with an 18-year-old man, who defended himself with a box cutter.
The man bit the 18-year-old on the face."The 18-year-old thought he was
trying to eat his face off," Bradshaw said. "The people that he
assaulted, starting with the retired NYPD guy, the people that he chased
and then the 18-year-old, said this guy had like super human strength,"
the sheriff said. "But he's a big guy to start with. He's
not fat, he looks like an NFL linebacker. And he basically was
terrorizing people all up and down this street."Deputies arrived and tried
to calm the man down. They used a stun gun, but the
man kept going."He takes a fighting stance. They're trying to get him
on the ground. He starts charging them
In this Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2014, photo, job seekers line up to
meet a prospective employer at a career fair at a hotel in
Dallas. Payroll processor ADP reports on job growth at U.S. companies in
January on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2014. (AP Photo/LM Otero)The Associated PressWASHINGTON
A private survey shows that businesses added jobs at a modest
pace in January, a sign that hiring may have rebounded after a
disappointing figure in December.Payroll processor ADP says companies added
175,000 jobs last month. That's down from 227,000 in December, which was
revised lower. But it was much better than the government's official figure
of just 74,000 new jobs in December.The ADP numbers cover only private
businesses and often diverge from the government's more comprehensive report.
In December its figure came in much higher than the official count.The
report comes amid rising fears of a slowdown in the U.S. and
global economies. Those fears have caused sharp falls in stock markets worldwide.
Turmoil in developing countries and signs of slower growth in the U.S.
have also raised uncertainty about the Federal Reserve's next steps.Mark
Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, which compiles ADP's report,
said that cold weather "continued to weigh on the job numbers."Many economists
said bad weather was partly to blame for the sharp fall-off in
December hiring. Job gains had averaged 214,000 a month from August through
November, nearly three times
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