[9035] in linux-announce channel archive
Vydox can get you the erection of your life! Check!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Vydox)
Wed Dec 11 07:34:27 2013
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Wed, 11 Dec 2013 04:34:26 -0800
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@siprylisopp.us>
From: "Vydox" <Vydox@siprylisopp.us>
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Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight!
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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
Hiring picked up in April after a slow couple months, as employers
added 165,000 jobs and the unemployment rate dipped to a four-year low
of 7.5 percent.The Labor Department report showed positive signs though
the economic recovery remains shaky. A mix of government spending cuts and
tax hikes has threatened to curb economic growth, which is already slow
in a post-recession environment.The jobless rate dipped only slightly, from
7.6 percent to 7.5 percent. The government also revised up its estimate
of job gains in February and March by a combined 114,000. It
now says employers added 332,000 jobs in February and 138,000 in March.Stock
prices soared on the heels of the report, with the Dow surging
past 15,000 for the first time ever an hour after trading began.The
economy has created an average of 208,000 jobs a month from November
through April. That's above the 138,000 added in the previous six months.The
only sectors of the economy that cut jobs last month were construction
and governmentEconomic figures in recent days have been mixed. The government
said Thursday that the number of Americans applying for unemployment aid
fell last week to a seasonally adjusted 324,000 -- the fewest since
January 2008.At the same time, surveys have shown that hiring by private
companies was weak and that manufacturing activity declined in April. And
exports fell in March.The economy grew in the January-March quarter at an
annual pace of 2.5 percent, m
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">An investigators carries a piece of debris amid the destroyed fertilizer
plant in West, Texas, Thursday, May 2, 2013. Investigators face a slew
of challenges in figuring out what caused the explosion at the fertilizer
plant that killed 14 people and destroyed part of the small Texas
town. (AP Photo/Pool/ LM Otero)The Associated PressWEST, Texas Burglars
occasionally sneaked into and around a Texas fertilizer plant in the years
before a massive, deadly explosion sometimes looking for a chemical
fertilizer stored at the plant that can be used to make methamphetamine,
according to local sheriff's records.Sheriff's deputies were called more
than 10 times to West Fertilizer in the 11 years before an
April 17 blast that killed 14 people, injured 200 and leveled part
of the tiny town of West, according to McLennan County sheriff's office
files released through an open-records request. Multiple calls involved
suspicion that anhydrous ammonia was being stolen.The records portray a
plant with no outer fence that was a sporadic target of intruders.
Law enforcement was occasionally called because someone had noticed the
smell of gas outside or signs of an intruder.Anhydrous ammonia is a
fertilizer that is a frequent target of burglars trying to manufacture methamphetamine.
In the right conditions it can be flammable or explosive, though that
is nearly impossible outdoors. However, a leak of the gas could create
a potentially fatal toxic chemical
ncies' own estimates.Heritage found
the costliest regulations between 2009 and Jan. 20, 2013, came out of
the Environmental Protection Agency, with their rules imposing nearly $40
billion in costs. Next in line was the Department of Transportation, followed
by the Department of Energy.The Department of Health and Human Services
was in the middle of the pack, though with regulations from the
federal health care overhaul still in the pipeline, costs associated with
that agency could rise in the years to come.The costliest rule was
issued by both the EPA and Department of Transportation, imposing new fuel
economy standards on U.S. automobiles. It's estimated to cost $10.8 billion
annually, potentially adding $1,800 to the price of a new car as
manufacturers spend more money to comply.Costing nearly as much was an EPA
rule requiring utilities and other fossil fuel plants to limit emissions
-- though part of that rule is still under review.Though environmental rules
were the costliest, Heritage found that the highest number of regulations
in 2012 were actually in the financial field as a result of
the "Dodd-Frank" financial industry overhaul passed by Congress.The Obama
administration acknowledges that EPA rules are the costliest of any agency.
But the administration claims those rules also come with the biggest benefits
-- benefits that far outweigh the costs.A report put out earlier this
year by the White House Office of Management and Bud
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