[Abel-tasman] Automatic can opener - perfect for people with
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Sun Jan 5 15:37:59 CET 2014
Smart Touch Can Opener - World's Best No-Hands Bottle, Can & Jar Opener
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he government estimates
are correct, that leaves billions of barrels of oil and trillions more
cubic feet of natural gas left for the taking.Thats good news for
North Dakota -- a state thats already reaped big benefits from the
oil boom and has one of the strongest state economies in the
country coupled with an exceptionally low unemployment rate. Tax revenues
from natural gas and oil hit $1 billion last year in North
Dakota and the state is on track to double that number next
year. Republican Sen. John Hoeven believes numbers from the new USGS survey
will draw even more developers to the area.This will mean a lot
of jobs, he told FoxNews.com. Financially we are already very strong, we
have no debt, but this will mean a lot more. Stores, restaurants,
movie theaters well have to build and well have to hire
workers.The competition to court employees is already on at the McDonalds
in Dickinson, N.D. where prospective hires are being lured in with $300
signing bonuses, Hoeven said.Calls to McDonalds Corp. for comment were not
immediately returned. Some environmental experts like John Harju, associate
director for research with the Energy and Environmental Research Center
at the University of North Dakota, believe the possibilities are even greater
than what the government forecasts.Like any of these USGS estimates, think
of them as a milemarker thats well behind you in the rearview
mirror, he told the Grand Forks Herald in North Dakota.S
e Syrians determine their own fate, so arming the opposition is
more palatable than direct U.S. intervention.The administration announced
last week that it believes Assad has used chemical weapons but said
the intelligence wasn't clear enough to be certain that the regime has
crossed President Barack Obama's announced "red line" of definite chemical
weapons use that he said would have "enormous consequences" for Assad's
government.Some senior leaders, including Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are skeptical about the wisdom of
providing arms to such a broad and complex mix of opposition groups.
But officials say there is a growing realization that, under increasing
pressure from Congress and other allied nations, the U.S. might soon have
to do more for the Free Syrian Army.The two-year civil war has
left an estimated 70,000 people dead and hundreds of thousands of refugees.High-level
meetings on the latest developments in the issue have been going on
all week, including one between Dempsey and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel,
who just returned from the Mideast.According to a U.S. official and a
U.N. diplomat, intelligence agencies are looking into allegations that chemical
weapons were used in Syria after the two March 19 attacks that
U.S., British, French and Qatari officials have referred to. They provided
no details on the new alleged attacks.This emerging shift within the administration
comes even as Assad a
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