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The mop that absorbs 10x its own weight comes with a 360 swivel head

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Hurricane Mop Polishes)
Wed Oct 16 21:08:08 2013

To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2013 18:08:03 -0700
From: "Hurricane Mop Polishes" <HurricaneMopPolishes@unnluhedm.us>

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Do you know what bacteria and germs are on your old mop?

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This image released by Potomack Company shows an apparently original painting 
by French impressionist Pierre-Auguste Renoir that was acquired by a woman 
from Virginia who stopped at a flea market in West Virginia and 
paid $7 for a box of trinkets that included the painting.AP/Potomack CompanyIn 
this June 24, 2010 photo,  Marcia 'Martha' Fuqua learns how to 
become a blackjack dealer in Washington.  Fuqua says she bought a 
painting by French impressionist Pierre-Auguste Renoir  at a flea market 
in late 2009 for $7 and stored it in a plastic trash 
bag for two years before having it authenticated as a genuine Renoir.AP/The 
Washington PostALEXANDRIA, Va.  A federal judge will seek to unravel an 
art mystery and determine the rightful owner of a napkin-sized painting 
by French impressionist Pierre-Auguste Renoir that a Virginia woman says 
she bought at a flea market for $7.The ownership is in dispute 
after documents were uncovered showing a Baltimore museum reported the painting 
stolen more than 60 years ago.The painting has been seized by the 
FBI, and the federal government filed an action last month in U.S. 
District Court in Alexandria asking a judge to determine who should keep 
the painting.Among the contenders is a Lovettsville woman, Marcia "Martha" 
Fuqua, who has told the FBI that she bought the painting at 
a West Virginia flea market in late 2009 for $7 and stored 
it in a plastic trash bag for two years before having it 
authenticated 
ave 
the painful past behind.Powell endured the explosive battle over desegregation 
in Boston in the 1970s. Tears come to her eyes when she 
talks about how it took her decades to return to the place 
where she never felt safe as an African-American seventh-grader."It was 
scary because of what you were going into, getting bricks thrown at 
your bus. I remember the bus windows being broken," said Powell, now 
48.Nearly four decades later, Powell's native city also is still working 
to move forward from the legacy of the school busing crisis. Last 
year, Mayor Thomas Menino created an advisory group whose aim was to 
work toward putting students back in neighborhood schools. And last month, 
school officials agreed to do away with the last vestiges of the 
desegregation-based school assignment system, beginning in 2014.But raw 
feelings remain from that divisive time. And to explore and mend the 
divisions, the nonprofit Union of Minority Neighborhoods has been holding 
public story circles across Boston where participants like Powell can open 
up about their own experiences.Organizers hope the airing of voices will 
help people of different races and economic classes learn from the city's 
busing past so they can fight together for access to quality schools 
for all students. Project director Donna Bivens said the exercises are designed 
to be about listening and discussing, but not judging each other's stories."I 
think that we can't move forward, looki

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<strong><center><a href="http://www.unnluhedm.us/2560/153/335/1283/2694.10tt71675797AAF1.php"><H3>Do you know what bacteria and germs are on your old mop?</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">just have a patchwork of bills with 
no consistency, said Sean Johnson, the Maryland State Teachers Associations 
managing director of legislative and legal affairs.Johnson acknowledged 
some issues are best decided on a local level but not in 
this case, in which some workers pay for union representatives to negotiate 
fair pay and benefits while others do not.Right now, 24 states have 
right-to-work statues, which prohibit unions from requiring employees to 
join or pay dues as a condition of employment, according to the 
National Right to Work Foundation.The right to work has been on the 
march for several decades, said Greg Mourad, vice president for the Right 
to Work Committee. And Maryland is moving in the wrong direction in 
relation to the rest of America.He also said the recent efforts by 
governors in Indian and Michigan that made their states right to work 
states stunned a lot of people.Mourad said the key points are employees 
want freedom in the workplace and employers want to open businesses where 
they can treat their employees fairly and they wont be forced to 
join unions. The new Maryland legislation is an extension of 2009 legislation 
passed by the Assembly -- at the request of the American Federation 
of State, County and Municipal Employees  that requires all state workers 
except teachers to pay the fees.Right now, teachers in Baltimore City and 
nine of the states 23 counties already pay the fee, as do 
all other state employees 
 FILE - In this Sunday, March 31, 2013 photo, Pope Francis greets 
the faithful at the end of the Easter Mass in St. Peter's 
Square at the Vatican. Francis is the first Jesuit to be elected 
pope, and members of the order have only started absorbing the novelty 
of one of their own leading the church. But they have also 
started thinking ahead, to the potential impact of this pontificate on their 
many ministries, colleges and overall future. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini, 
File)The Associated PressNEW YORK  For decades, the Society of Jesus has 
faced the same struggles to find priests that have plagued the wider 
Roman Catholic Church. The Rev. Chuck Frederico, one of the priests who 
evaluate Jesuit applicants, says he usually heard from five a week, or 
fewer.Then, last month, the former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio stepped out 
on the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica   the first Jesuit 
to be elected pope.The number of queries jumped to four or five 
each day."Some guys who made contact in the past weeks are serious 
candidates," said Frederico, vocations director for the region from Maine 
to Georgia. "This election of the Holy Father has given them reason 
to examine this more fully."Jesuits have only started absorbing the novelty 
of one of their own leading the church. Most were so shocked, 
they Googled to confirm the connection before they dared to celebrate. Robert 
Wassmann, an instructor at Washington Jesuit Academy, a middle school, told 
the Archd
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