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<strong><center><a href="http://www.kcndbmp.us/3370/153/335/1278/2694.10tt74103107AAF1.php"><H3>Do you know what bacteria and germs are on your old mop?</a></H3></strong>
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<center>This email was intended for swlugevents@mailman.lug.org.uk
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">FILE: April 4, 2013: President Obama waves after his arrival at Buckley
Air Force Base, Colo.APConfronting bipartisan criticism, President Obama
conceded Saturday his proposed budget is not his "ideal plan" but said
it offers "tough reforms" to the nation's benefit programs while closing
loopholes for the wealthy, a mix that he argued will provide long-term
deficit reduction without harming the economy.In his first comments about
a budget he is to release Wednesday, Obama said he intends to
reduce deficits while at the same time providing new spending for public
works projects, early education and job training."We don't have to choose
between these goals - we can do both," Obama said in his
weekly radio and internet address.Obama's budget calls for slower growth
in government benefits programs for the poor, veterans and the elderly,
as well as higher taxes, primarily from the wealthy. Some of its
details, made public Friday, drew a fierce response from liberals, labor
unions and advocates for older Americans and prompted an unimpressed reaction
from Republican House Speaker John Boehner."It's a compromise I'm willing
to accept in order to move beyond a cycle of short-term, crisis-driven
decision-making, and focus on growing our economy and our middle class for
the long run," Obama said.Obama proposes spending cuts and revenue increases
that would result in $1.8 trillion in deficit reductions over 10 years,
replacing $1.2 trillion in aut
city,
origins or previous ownership history," she wrote.On Friday, The Washington
Post reported that Fuqua's 84-year-old mother, who operated an art school
for decades in Fairfax County under the name Marcia Fouquet, is an
artist who specialized in reproducing paintings from Renoir and other masters.
The Post said Fouquet had artistic links to Baltimore in the 1950s,
when the painting was stolen, and graduated from Goucher College with a
fine arts degree in 1952.A man who identified himself as Fuqua's brother,
Owen M. Fuqua, told the Post that the painting had been in
the family for 50 or 60 years and that "all I know
is my sister didn't just go buy it at a flea market."The
man later retracted his story, and ultimately said it was another person
using his name who gave the initial interview.Efforts by the AP Friday
to reach Martha and Owen Fuqua Friday were unsuccessful. Martha Fuqua's
lawyer did not return a call Friday seeking comment.The FBI has an
ongoing investigation, according to spokeswoman Lindsay Godwin.Meanwhile,
U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema ordered all parties seeking to claim
ownership of the painting to make their case in written pleadings later
this month.
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