[Abel-tasman] 4 minutes or less will give you potatoes that impress

Potato Express PotatoExpress at biofogicmsky.us
Mon Nov 18 23:39:29 CET 2013


Quickly steam potatoes, corn, and bread in microwave

http://www.biofogicmsky.us/3120/183/405/1480/3045.10tt62883642AAF11.php





Unsub- http://www.biofogicmsky.us/3120/183/405/1480/3045.10tt62883642AAF12.html













diminished greatly.The Senate advanced 
the federal legislation Thursday morning, but the key plank of that pertains 
to expanding background checks. A provision to renew bans on assault weapons 
and high-capacity magazines was dropped from the main bill, though it will 
likely get a vote as an amendment.The odds of the Senate advancing 
to an up-or-down vote on the legislation improved Wednesday after two conservative 
senators -- one Democrat, one Republican -- announced a proposed compromise 
on background checks meant to assuage gun owners' concerns. The plan would 
apply to background checks for gun shows and Internet sales but exempt 
certain transactions among family members and others.Still, the National 
Rifle Association said the proposal went too far.If a bill ultimately passes, 
it will only come after millions more firearms have been purchased. Ammunition, 
too, has been flying off the shelves at a rapid clip. The 
sales have been picking up for several months. While Obama's re-election 
and the push for gun control legislation have been blamed, others have 
pointed the finger at the Department of Homeland Security, which has drawn 
attention for looking to purchase up to 1.6 billion rounds over the 
next five years for its law enforcement divisions.
A group of education organizations and state leaders is proposing a kind 
of national treaty that would regulate online education. The arrangement, 
announced Thursday, would create a common market and make it easier for 
institutions to enroll students anywhere in the country.Currently, regulations 
that authorize universities' and companies' online courses vary from state 
to state.The proposed state compact would also create a uniform set of 
consumer protections. That could give students in some states new recourse 
to complain to state regulators about a program that's based elsewhere. 
But in some states, the common standard could dilute oversight.About 7 million 
U.S. students currently access college courses online.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20131118/b27aab07/attachment-0001.htm


More information about the Abel-tasman mailing list