[21907] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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Motion sensor outdoor LED light

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Light Angel Promo)
Sun Nov 24 07:04:06 2013

From: "Light Angel Promo" <LightAngelPromo@offerslinorrie.us>
To: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
Reply-To: <bounce-65731829@offerslinorrie.us>
Date: Sun, 24 Nov 2013 04:04:10 -0800

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Cordless outdoor motion sensor light

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April 10, 2013: Activists rally for immigration reform in Los Angeles.APWhile 
the authors of the newly released Senate immigration bill touted its multibillion 
dollar investment in border security, critics are seizing on what they describe 
as a major loophole -- giving the government "discretion" to choose when 
to enforce immigration laws.The union representing Immigration and Customs 
Enforcement agents has long complained that the Obama administration has 
made their job harder by preventing agents from detaining and deporting 
select illegal immigrants. They had petitioned members of the so-called 
"Gang of Eight" -- the lawmakers writing the immigration bill -- to 
address those concerns in the package.But, in a letter obtained by FoxNews.com, 
National ICE Council President Chris Crane said "this legislation again 
does nothing to resolve that."The letter was sent Tuesday to Sen. Marco 
Rubio, R-Fla., a key member of the Gang of Eight, shortly before 
the legislation was formally released. Crane thanked Rubio for meeting with 
him, a meeting he had long sought, but complained that the bill 
did not address his concerns."In fact, it appears that the security components 
it does contain focus mostly on the exterior, and rely on the 
discretion of DHS, even though DHS is in federal court right now 
for undermining the constitutional rule of law," Crane wrote, referring 
to a lawsuit brought by ICE agents.The proposal, as emphasized by its 
co-authors
The following is a transcript of President Obama's remarks at an interfaith 
service in Boston to honor victims of the marathon bombing.Obama: Hello, 
Boston. Scripture tells us to run with endurance the race that is 
set before us, run with endurance the race that is set before 
us. On Monday morning, the sun rose over Boston, the sunlight glistened 
off the State House Dome. In the Common, in the Public Garden, 
spring was in bloom.On this Patriot's Day, like so many before, fans 
jumped onto the T to see the Sox at Fenway. In Hopkinton, 
runners laced up their shoes and set out on a 26.2-mile test 
of dedication and grit and the human spirit. And across this city, 
hundreds of thousands of Bostonians lined the streets to hand the runners 
cups of water and to cheer them on.It was a beautiful day 
to be in Boston, a day that explains why a poet once 
wrote that this town is not just a capital, not just a 
place. Boston, he said, is the perfect state of grace.And then, in 
an instant, the day's beauty was shattered. A celebration became a tragedy. 
And so we come together to pray and mourn and measure our 
loss, but we also come together today to reclaim that state of 
grace, to reaffirm that the spirit of this city is undaunted and 
the spirit of this country shall remain undimmed.To Governor Patrick, Mayor 
Menino, Cardinal O'Malley, and all the faith leaders who are here, Governors 
Romney, Swift, Weld, and Dukakis, members of Congress, and most of al

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">April 18, 2013: Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., flanked by Sen. Charles Schumer, 
D-N.Y., left, and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., right, speaks about immigration 
legislation.APAuthors of the newly released Senate immigration bill touted 
the package Thursday as a "bipartisan breakthrough" in advance of a critical 
hearing, as opponents began to organize against the bill -- claiming it 
doesn't do enough to enforce existing immigration law.Sen. Marco Rubio, 
R-Fla., who has put his conservative reputation on the line with his 
involvement in writing the bill, took to the floor late Thursday afternoon 
to defend it. Though critics have homed in on the bill's pathway 
to citizenship for illegal immigrants, Rubio said the package would also 
fix a "broken" legal immigration system so that foreign students trained 
in America would not be sent back home once they've learned their 
skills."If there wasn't a single illegal immigrant in the United States, 
we would still have to do immigration reform," Rubio said.As for the 
path to citizenship, which would give up to 11 million illegal immigrants 
a shot at legal status, Rubio said "the alternative is to do 
nothing" -- which he described as "amnesty."Rubio and the seven other co-authors, 
who formally unveiled the legislation at a press conference Thursday, are 
hoping to avoid the fate of the 2007 immigration bill, which died 
amid heated criticism from both sides of the aisle. Republicans have bluntly 
professed an in
 May 10, 2012: Thomas Perez, now the Labor secretary nominee, speaks in 
Phoenix.APLabor secretary nominee Thomas Perez was confronted Thursday with 
tough questions about an alleged "secret deal" he cut with leaders from 
St. Paul, Minn., during his tenure as a top attorney at the 
Justice Department.During Perez' confirmation hearing, Sen. Lamar Alexander, 
R-Tenn., accused the nominee of "manipulating" the system to get the result 
he wanted - and potentially costing taxpayers millions of dollars in the 
process.According to a Republican report released earlier this week, Perez 
helped persuade St. Paul to drop a contentious lawsuit in exchange for 
the Justice Department staying out of whistleblower cases brought against 
the city. Perez' "quid pro quo" potentially cost taxpayers as much as 
$200 million, the report said."That seems to me to be an extraordinary 
amount of wheeling and dealing outside the normal responsibilities of the 
assistant attorney general for civil rights," said Alexander, who is the 
top Republican on the Senate panel screening Perez' nomination."It seems 
you have a duty to the government to collect the money, a 
duty to protect the whistleblower who's kind of left hanging in the 
wind."Both cases involved the city of St. Paul. The 67-page report states 
that the Justice Department's decision to opt out of the whistleblower cases 
potentially cost taxpayers as much as $200 million -- the amount the 
government could have won ha
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