[8058] in linux-announce channel archive
Microwave gourmet food In just minutes
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Stone Wave Offer)
Wed Sep 25 11:04:31 2013
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@dlfleayrower.us>
From: "Stone Wave Offer" <StoneWaveOffer@dlfleayrower.us>
Date: Wed, 25 Sep 2013 08:04:30 -0700
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Stone Wave Microwave Cooker - Cook Like A Pro In Your Microwave
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awmakers are pushing to renew the subsidy.The Forest Service
issue provides one look at the real-world fallout of sequestration, which
began March 1 after Congress and President Barack Obama failed to agree
on a deficit-cutting plan. Forced to find the required savings in the
wobbly aftermath of recession, federal officials are getting creative --
reducing hours at courthouses, furloughing employees and cutting back services.
The full impact of sequestration remains unclear because most of the reductions
have yet to take effect.Ryan Yates of the National Association of Counties
said state and local officials understand that sequestration is the law
of the land and that future cuts to scores of federal programs
are inevitable. But there is widespread concern that the Forest Service's
action means that the sequestration's reach is far greater than they anticipated."This
retroactive move by the administration to squeeze more money from rural
forest communities is not only legally questionable, but insults the longstanding
relationship between counties and the federal government," Yates said.Tidwell's
March letters to the governors incited lawmakers and state officials, who
said the payments came from revenues generated in the 2012 budget year
and were therefore not subject to sequestration.The National Governors'
Association advised governors to consult closely with their legal staffs
before making a decision."No one has ever heard of an age
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa After fleeing to Israel following an immigration raid
in 2008, a former manager at a kosher slaughterhouse in Iowa finally
appeared in a U.S. courtroom Friday to face charges that he conspired
to exploit immigrant workers for profit.His hands and feet shackled, Hosam
Amara walked slowly into the federal courtroom in Cedar Rapids. Bald, short
and stocky, the 48-year-old former poultry production manager at the Agriprocessors
plant in Postville wore an orange jailhouse jumpsuit and a stone-faced demeanor.Amara
pleaded not guilty to an indictment charging him with conspiring to harbor
workers who were in the country illegally and conspiring to provide false
immigration papers at what was the nation's largest kosher slaughterhouse.
He faces 25 counts related to harboring and two counts related to
document fraud.Amara was ordered jailed pending a trial scheduled for July
1 after assistant U.S. Attorney Peter Deegan said the government considered
him a flight risk.The brief arraignment was a routine hearing, but was
a long time in the making.Prosecutors say Amara fled to Israel, where
he has citizenship, with his family shortly after federal agents descended
on Agriprocessors in May 2008, arresting 389 workers in what was the
largest immigration raid at the time. He was indicted six months later
and became a fugitive from justice when he could not be found
and did not turn himself in.Israeli authorities acting on a U.S. extr
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">adition
request arrested Omara on March 31, 2011. He challenged his extradition
to the U.S. but was flown back to Iowa on Thursday after
Israel's Supreme Court rejected his final appeal in March, Deegan said.The
appearance comes as a coalition of affected immigrants, church leaders,
attorneys and other advocates planned to gather outside the same courthouse
next week to mark the five-year anniversary of the raid, which was
widely condemned as inhumane and a travesty of justice.The arrested immigrants
were bused to the National Cattle Congress in Waterloo for hearings in
makeshift courtrooms. Most of them pleaded guilty to identity theft charges,
spent five months in prison and were then deported. The raid devastated
Postville, a city of about 2,000 people in northeast Iowa, and tore
apart dozens, if not hundreds, of families.Prosecutors say Amara managed
the second shift on the poultry side of the plant, exercising "substantial
control" over production and working as a lieutenant of Agriprocessors vice
president Sholom Rubashkin, whose family owned the company.Prosecutors say
Amara knowingly employed immigrants who were not in the country legally
but helped keep them off the books by putting them on the
payroll of a separate company. They say he allowed employees to obtain
and use Social Security and green cards that he knew were false.In
addition to Amara, the indictment charged Rubashkin and former plant managers
Brent Beebe and Zee
is family.Friday is Ricardo Portillo's youngest daughter's
16th birthday, and the family was planning to leave on vacation Thursday,
Johana Portillo said. Instead, they have set up a bank fund in
case their father dies."If my dad doesn't make it, we want to
make his last wish come true," Johana Portillo said. "To see his
family again."She said his sisters are trying to come from Guadalajara,
Mexico. The referee hadn't seen his sisters in the 16 years since
he moved to Utah."It's just not fair," said Johana Portillo, holding back
tears. "This person caused us a lot of pain. I want justice
for my dad, and we're going to get it. ... If he
spends time in jail forever, it's not enough. They are not going
to bring my daddy back."
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