[Abel-tasman] Go solar this summer

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Tue Sep 17 01:23:36 CEST 2013


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re is more effectively integrated to 
improve the economy and security of all peoples," Obama said Thursday. "There 
is a whole range of opportunities, and that will be the purpose 
of this trip."Friday's speech came as Obama's popularity in Mexico has risen 
in recent years and as views of the United States also improve. 
A Pew Research Center poll in March found that two-thirds of Mexicans 
have a favorable opinion of the U.S., compared with 44 percent in 
2010. About half of Mexicans have confidence that Obama will do the 
right thing on world affairs, up from 38 percent in 2011.Still, dozens 
of migrant families deported from the U.S. even though their children were 
born there rallied outside the U.S. Embassy before Obama's arrival Thursday. 
"Obama, don't deport my Mama," one sign said. So far, the Obama 
administration has deported more than 1.6 million people.For all the attention 
to commerce and trade, the visit to Mexico -- less than two 
days long -- was not designed for major breakthroughs or new initiatives. 
Indeed, on one of the top economic pacts before them, the two 
presidents merely reaffirmed a goal to conclude negotiations this year on 
a Trans-Pacific Partnership, an Asia-Pacific trading bloc that is key to 
Obama's efforts to boost exports to Asia.Both men, however, did announce 
a new partnership to build on the business relationship with closer cooperation 
between top officials in Mexico and the U.S., including Vice President Joe
adition 
request arrested Omara on March 31, 2011. He challenged his extradition 
to the U.S. but was flown back to Iowa on Thursday after 
Israel's Supreme Court rejected his final appeal in March, Deegan said.The 
appearance comes as a coalition of affected immigrants, church leaders, 
attorneys and other advocates planned to gather outside the same courthouse 
next week to mark the five-year anniversary of the raid, which was 
widely condemned as inhumane and a travesty of justice.The arrested immigrants 
were bused to the National Cattle Congress in Waterloo for hearings in 
makeshift courtrooms. Most of them pleaded guilty to identity theft charges, 
spent five months in prison and were then deported. The raid devastated 
Postville, a city of about 2,000 people in northeast Iowa, and tore 
apart dozens, if not hundreds, of families.Prosecutors say Amara managed 
the second shift on the poultry side of the plant, exercising "substantial 
control" over production and working as a lieutenant of Agriprocessors vice 
president Sholom Rubashkin, whose family owned the company.Prosecutors say 
Amara knowingly employed immigrants who were not in the country legally 
but helped keep them off the books by putting them on the 
payroll of a separate company. They say he allowed employees to obtain 
and use Social Security and green cards that he knew were false.In 
addition to Amara, the indictment charged Rubashkin and former plant managers 
Brent Beebe and Zee
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