[16704] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Internet Marketing Is Dead...
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Profit Siege)
Fri Jun 28 16:15:13 2013
From: "Profit Siege" <ProfitSiege@bletspuranawyat.net>
To: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
Reply-To: <bounce-65731829@bletspuranawyat.net>
Date: Fri, 28 Jun 2013 13:15:12 -0700
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PayPal Insider Discovers Lucrative Home Business...
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Just prior to that fateful phone call, Liz Norden had been lugging
groceries into her Massachusetts home. Seconds later, her life and the
lives of two of her sons changed forever.Ma, Im hurt real
bad, Nordens 31-year-old son said from an ambulance en route to Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center, according to The Boston Globe.- Liz NordenNordens
son, who had gone with his older brother to watch a friend
compete in the Boston Marathon, said his legs were badly burned in
an explosion. His brother had been next to him, the newspaper reports,
but they were no longer together.Norden, a mother of five, would learn
within the next two hours that each of her sons had lost
a leg from the knee down in the bombings. She declined to
release their names without talking to them first, but both are graduates
of Stoneham High School and had been laid off recently from their
roofing jobs. The elder brother, 33, still lives in Stoneham; the younger
in Wakefield.Id never imagined in my wildest dreams this would ever happen,
Norden told the newspaper from outside the Beth Israel Deaconess emergency
room late Monday. I feel sick. I think I could pass out.The
girlfriend of Nordens younger son also suffered serious burns and other
injuries in the attack. She was hospitalized at Tufts Medical Center.Norden,
meanwhile, had braced herself for the moment when she would be allowed
to see her sons, who were apparently standing next to the 8-year-old
boy who die
Then/Now: The
Cast of 'Leave It to Beaver'Check out where the folks from this
'50s sitcom are now that they're not chasing 'the Beaver.'Actor Frank Bank,
best known as the bully Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford on the classic sitcom
Leave it to Beaver had died, according to multiple reports. He was
71.No cause of death or photos of Bank were immediately available.His co-star
on Beaver Jerry Mathers, announced the news of his passing on Facebook:
"I was so sad to hear today of the passing of my
dear friend and business associate Frank Bank, who played Lumpy on Leave
it to Beaver. He was a character and always kept us laughing.
My deepest condolences to Frank's family."Mathers played Theodore Beaver
Cleaver. The show ran from 1957 to 1963.For several years after Leave
it to Beaver ended, Bank continued to be on TV. He made
scattered appearances on Hollywood Squares and Family Feud.Later, he left
the spotlight to become a bond broker.But even with his new job
he still kept his ties to the Beaver clan. Mathers and Barbara
Billingsley were some of his clients.Billingsley, who played June Cleaver,
once told People magazine: "Frank is certainly brighter than Lumpy Rutherford,
and a very good stockbroker."
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">l waters that have
drowned prior attempts to pass an immigration overhaul. Even debates over
process have the potential to scuttle a deal.Prominent critics include Sen.
Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee,
and Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., the top Republican on the Senate Budget
Committee. Both have raised concerns about the cost of providing a pathway
to citizenship for illegal immigrants -- though Rubio's office has said
it's too early to make assumptions about those costs.Sessions was dubious
about the hearing announcement Monday."Chairman Leahy's decision to now
hold two hearings in two days -- on one Friday, one on
Monday -- is only further proof of the Majority's desire to rush
this bill with minimum public scrutiny," he said in a statement. "We
are talking about legislation that will impact virtually every aspect of
our society, reshape our entire immigration system, introduce at least 30
million new foreign workers into the economy, and directly impact every
single American worker and taxpayer. ... Something is truly broken in Washington
when the people, the law enforcement officers who protect them, and the
people's representatives, have less time to review the bill than the special
interests who helped write it."Rubio has also tried to extract more hearings
out of Leahy, though he applauded the announcement Monday."The Judiciary
Committee's announcement that it will hold multiple hearings on t
In a political role reversal, Republicans are blasting President Obama's
plan to consider selling the Tennessee Valley Authority, an icon of the
New Deal long targeted by conservatives as an example of government overreach.Obama's
2014 budget proposal calls for a strategic review of the TVA, the
nation's largest public utility with 9 million customers in seven states
from Virginia to Mississippi.Selling the U.S-owned power company could reduce
the federal deficit by at least $25 billion and "help put the
nation on a sustainable fiscal path," Obama says in a budget document.Not
so fast, say GOP lawmakers in the region."It's one more bad idea
in a budget full of bad ideas," said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn.,
a longtime TVA champion."There is no assurance that selling TVA to a
profit-making entity would reduce electric bills in the Tennessee Valley,
and it could lead to higher electricity rates" for customers in Alabama,
Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia,
Alexander said.Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., vowed to "carefully study any
proposals to restructure TVA" to ensure it continues to deliver affordable
electricity throughout the region.Privatizing TVA has been proposed before
"and been determined to be a very bad idea," added Rep. John
Duncan, R-Tenn.Administration officials emphasized that privatization was
just one option being considered. Sale of the agency has been discussed
by prior administrations
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