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<strong><center><a href="http://www.pprfrbura.us/2872/174/379/1406/2932.10tt62883642AAF1.php"><H3>Motion sensor outdoor LED light</a></H3></strong>
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                                <a href="http://www.pprfrbura.us/2872/174/379/1406/2932.10tt62883642AAF2.php">Light Angel — The Motion Activated Stick Up LED Light</a>
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<center>This email was intended for abel-tasman@coredump.buug.de
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">The White House budget office is recalculating how to apply automatic spending
cuts for a handful of agencies, freeing up almost $4 billion for
the Pentagon and another $1 billion or so for Homeland Security Department
and NASA.Capitol Hill aides familiar with the White House changes say the
administration has identified almost $5 billion in cuts that can be restored
under its reading of the arcane budget rules governing the across-the-board
cuts, known as sequestration. The calculations would restore $5 billion
of the scheduled $85 billion in automatic sequestration cuts.An administration
official confirmed the calculations Friday but declined to comment further
because the process is ongoing. The official and congressional aides spoke
on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the
changes publicly.The move comes amid increasing public pressure to find
ways to lessen the impact of sequestration. Federal agencies are warning
that the mandatory cuts could mean cutbacks in services. Last week, Congress
passed and President Obama signed legislation giving the Federal Aviation
Administration the ability to avoid furloughs that were causing flight delays
by tapping money in other accounts.The cuts officially began in March after
Congress and Obama could not reach an agreement on a broader budget
deal. The automatic cuts had been imposed under a hard-fought 2011 debt
and budget pact.The cuts have so far failed to live
Hiring picked up in April after a slow couple months, as employers
added 165,000 jobs and the unemployment rate dipped to a four-year low
of 7.5 percent.The Labor Department report showed positive signs though
the economic recovery remains shaky. A mix of government spending cuts and
tax hikes has threatened to curb economic growth, which is already slow
in a post-recession environment.The jobless rate dipped only slightly, from
7.6 percent to 7.5 percent. The government also revised up its estimate
of job gains in February and March by a combined 114,000. It
now says employers added 332,000 jobs in February and 138,000 in March.Stock
prices soared on the heels of the report, with the Dow surging
past 15,000 for the first time ever an hour after trading began.The
economy has created an average of 208,000 jobs a month from November
through April. That's above the 138,000 added in the previous six months.The
only sectors of the economy that cut jobs last month were construction
and governmentEconomic figures in recent days have been mixed. The government
said Thursday that the number of Americans applying for unemployment aid
fell last week to a seasonally adjusted 324,000 -- the fewest since
January 2008.At the same time, surveys have shown that hiring by private
companies was weak and that manufacturing activity declined in April. And
exports fell in March.The economy grew in the January-March quarter at an
annual pace of 2.5 percent, m
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