[Abel-tasman] Quickly cooks meat without drying it out
Meat TurboRoaster
MeatTurboRoaster at osatandiwant.us
Tue Nov 19 14:10:53 CET 2013
TurboRoaster - Cook Delicious Meat In Half Of The Time
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FILE: Jan. 21, 2013: President Obama starts in second term at the
ceremonial swearing-in at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.APJust six
months into his second term, President Obama has nominated a slew of
campaign donors and fundraisers for ambassadorships.These nominations include
major bundlers Denise Bauer and a Los Angeles entertainment attorney Crystal
Nix Hines.As of last month, Obama had given 32.2 percent of ambassadorships
to political appointees -- almost identical to his first term rate and
slightly higher than those of recent predecessors in the long-held tradition
of presidents rewarding big-time financial supporters.The number compares
to 30.02 percent under George W. Bush, 27.82 percent under Bill Clinton
and 31.30 percent under George H.W. Bush, according to the American Foreign
Service Association.The president has nominated 19 people for ambassadorships
in the second term including at least eight bundlers, according to The
Hill newspaper.The 2011-2012 amounts range from $2.36 million by Bauer,
chairwoman of the Women for Obama Finance, who would go to Belgium,
to $477,000 from Hines, who would represent the United States at the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO.Other
bundlers have been named to serve in Austria, Germany, Singapore, Spain,
the Dominican Republic and the United Kingdom.But much of the attention
remains focused on who will get two of the remaining top posts
--
tino vote nationwide last year.Closer to home, no Republican represents
any majority Hispanic district in the Legislature, even though the GOP holds
sizable majorities in the House and Senate. The only Hispanic ever elected
to the U.S. Senate from Texas, Ted Cruz, is a Republican whose
father was born in Cuba. Many top GOP leaders are counting on
him and Bush to remake the party's image with Hispanics.Gilberto Hinojosa,
chairman of the Texas Democratic Party, scoffs at that."How is it," he
asked, "that these people think that if they're fortunate to be born
to a Hispanic mother and are of Hispanic heritage, that gives them
the right to have the support of the Hispanic community?"Bush said Hispanics
"don't vote in a monolith." He sidestepped questions about national issues
such as immigration, choosing to focus on the responsibilities of the land
commissioner. The office oversees vast oil and mineral rights which help
fund public education. It also administers benefits to military veterans."This
is an office I've had my heart on for years," Bush said.
"I'm a former educator, a veteran and I have a strong energy
and asset background. This is kind of what I'm excited about."Born in
Houston, Bush grew up in Florida, where his father was governor from
1998 until 2007. He graduated from and played baseball for Rice University
in Houston before teaching school in inner-city Miami and working on George
W. Bush's presidential campaign.He earned
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