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Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: Morrisshot le Novembre 10, 2024, 02:54:38 pm

Titre: cktu Transcript: Michael Morell and James Winnefeld on Face the Nation, Octobe
Posté par: Morrisshot le Novembre 10, 2024, 02:54:38 pm
Dihi Biden joins picket line with UAW workers in Michigan:  Stick with it
 Rene Neira has been working on his college degree since the 1950s. Work and family took priority, so Neira enrolled in classes on and off. This year, his decades of hard work paid off. In the 50s, he started school, then soon fell in love and started a family,  Neira s granddaughter Melanie Salazar told The Uplift.  Then he went back in the 80s, the 90s, the early 2000s, and then it just so happened that he went back to stanley cup (https://www.stanleycups.at)  school again at the same time that I was starting. In 2016, when Neira was 82 years old, he enrolled at Palo Alto College in San Antonio, Texas mdash; the same school where his granddaughter was starting as a freshman.                Rene Neira decided to go back to college the same year his granddaughter, Melanie, became a freshman.                                                  stanley cup (https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk)      Melanie Salazar                                        The two earned their associate s degree at the same time, then they enrolled at the same school again: this time, the University of Texas San Antonio.                                         We never had classes together, but there were times we would meet up for lunch in the cafeteria, or sometimes we would be studying side-by-side in the library,  Salazar said.She was a communications major and Neira was an economics major, but the two would sometimes cross paths on campus. To Salazar, he was just a grandpa mdash; but to  stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.co.uk) other students, he was a presence on campus.  From what has been shared with me, he always had someth Qrkk Brandon Pettit s conviction overturned in 2013 murder of his parents
 The partia air max (https://www.airmaxplus.de) l government shutdown that started Dec. 22 is now the longest in U.S. history mdash; and there s no end in sight.This is the 21st government shutdown since Congress adopted new budgeting procedures in 1976, according to theCongressional Research Service,and it was also the third in 2018 alone. For perspective, there were only three shutdowns in the 25 years before 2018.The history of government gridlock shows a pattern: Shutdowns are usually resolved in just a few days, or they drag on for two or three weeks.                                        The shutdowns start when the president and Congress can t agree on government funding mdash; and the longer they last, the more they hurt the economy. Hundreds of thousands of federal workers are furloughed, services are ceased and major tourist attractions close. Standard  Poor s estimated last year that shutdowns cost the U.S. $6.5 billion a week. The last majo stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cup.ca) r shutdown, in 2013, cost $24 billion mdash; a rate of nearly $1.5 billion a day, according to SP.T crocs (https://www.crocss.com.de) he current shutdown broke the record Saturday, Jan. 12, when it was 22 days. This is what all the partial or complete shutdowns of the past looked like:        2018January: 3 days.Thefirst shutdownunder President Trump started in January after the president faced off with Congress on the fate of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals act.February: 1 day. The second shutdown on 2018, which came in February, was resolved in a matter of hours overnight w