Received: from mx4s.fisticrazed.com ([170.178.171.228]:50217 helo=mail.moneysmakerslo.com) by stodi.digitalkingdom.org with esmtp (Exim 4.87) (envelope-from ) id 1cgCWF-0000KV-FT for lojban@lojban.org; Tue, 21 Feb 2017 07:38:27 -0800 DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha1; c=relaxed/relaxed; s=dkim; d=moneysmakerslo.com; h=Date:From:To:Subject:MIME-Version:Content-Type:List-Unsubscribe:Message-ID; i=robert_black@moneysmakerslo.com; bh=B+gH41SpXAQiWJUbi2ek93r5i2Y=; b=Ny5MX55D/UZkaLJbjENwWa5ub4ePUhm2JhndEjtn7PL9OGIIl/3Z0qWnpSxCu4HJAD0j2N4PupBN HjPgczJ3HtFLW5c/8MBne94JcQrFrB6IoFA727MqgW51r36Ms61oLIC1PDl+JmkNjc9/K+y7phI9 M6YOPXTFArRBRTSnA6o= DomainKey-Signature: a=rsa-sha1; c=nofws; q=dns; s=dkim; d=moneysmakerslo.com; b=YWuSN6FZWT2OKTiERVy0kfEYsJqXnjsCssU/ZYY2xX47ylNCUeAT80ZnwP/c6EUDHDgnflIJMMrG NCarggGe9AMJI3oahj0kMC2z6E+5GK8ipM1IhSwSnyIyuSQutVJ3vhkQxisU5P+8nxifEUC8mdIb 9v3cF9ZCGI/p5LBgusQ=; Received: by mail.moneysmakerslo.com id hlhf5m0001go for ; Tue, 21 Feb 2017 10:30:08 -0500 (envelope-from ) Date: Tue, 21 Feb 2017 10:30:08 -0500 From: "Robert Black" To: Subject: Trump chooses Elon Musk as top advisor - See story 30573945 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="----=_Part_307_2126258355.1487691148435" X-SMTPAPI: {"category": "20170221-102622-759-282"} List-Unsubscribe: Feedback-ID: 20170221102622759282 Message-ID: <0.0.0.22.1D28C57623C5202.150CF17@mail.moneysmakerslo.com> X-Spam-Score: 3.8 (+++) X-Spam_score: 3.8 X-Spam_score_int: 38 X-Spam_bar: +++ X-Spam-Report: Spam detection software, running on the system "stodi.digitalkingdom.org", has NOT identified this incoming email as spam. The original message has been attached to this so you can view it or label similar future email. If you have any questions, see the administrator of that system for details. Content preview: Trump Now Considers Elon Musk His Top Advisor This is amazing and could be the best move ever made by-Trump. Overnight its projected that millions-of jobs will be created for every single American. The inventor of-TESLA is the peoples choice and coudlnt be a better fit [...] Content analysis details: (3.8 points, 5.0 required) pts rule name description ---- ---------------------- -------------------------------------------------- 0.0 URIBL_BLOCKED ADMINISTRATOR NOTICE: The query to URIBL was blocked. See http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/DnsBlocklists#dnsbl-block for more information. [URIs: moneysmakerslo.com] 2.5 URIBL_DBL_SPAM Contains a spam URL listed in the DBL blocklist [URIs: moneysmakerslo.com] -0.0 SPF_PASS SPF: sender matches SPF record 0.0 HTML_FONT_LOW_CONTRAST BODY: HTML font color similar or identical to background -1.9 BAYES_00 BODY: Bayes spam probability is 0 to 1% [score: 0.0000] 0.0 HTML_MESSAGE BODY: HTML included in message 0.0 MIME_QP_LONG_LINE RAW: Quoted-printable line longer than 76 chars 1.9 RAZOR2_CF_RANGE_E8_51_100 Razor2 gives engine 8 confidence level above 50% [cf: 100] 0.5 RAZOR2_CF_RANGE_51_100 Razor2 gives confidence level above 50% [cf: 100] 0.9 RAZOR2_CHECK Listed in Razor2 (http://razor.sf.net/) -0.1 DKIM_VALID Message has at least one valid DKIM or DK signature 0.1 DKIM_SIGNED Message has a DKIM or DK signature, not necessarily valid -0.1 DKIM_VALID_AU Message has a valid DKIM or DK signature from author's domain 0.0 T_REMOTE_IMAGE Message contains an external image ------=_Part_307_2126258355.1487691148435 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Trump Now Considers Elon Musk His Top Advisor This is amazing and could be the best move ever made by-Trump. Overnight its projected that millions-of jobs will be created for every single American. The inventor of-TESLA is the peoples choice and coudlnt be a better fit Chck out the entire story > http://www.moneysmakerslo.com/arachnid/dressers-laser/abd8Mm6Ks5o5bAfd.xivLKhFxivLKhzils63a As with any-president, the pressure is tremedous to turn things around and this seems like the first step that will change everything Start Reading On > > http://www.moneysmakerslo.com/arachnid/dressers-laser/abd8Mm6Ks5o5bAfd.xivLKhFxivLKhzils63a Shortly after Christines birth, Desma Mann returned to teaching. Christine stayed home with a babysitter until she was old enough to accompany her mother each day to her job in a tworoom elementary school out in surrounding Union County. Across the street from the school stretched acres of cotton fields, the raw material for Monroes mill and the source of income for many county residents. The school year followed the picking season. Students sweltered in the desks throughout the North Carolina summer before being released in time for the harvest in September and October. With all potential playmates either in school or working in the fields, Christine entertained herself by joining in the lessons in her mothers classroom. By the time she turned five, Desma Manns youngest daughter was a secondgrade student, ready to attend the consolidated chester Avenue School in Monroe. Christine became best friends with the principals daughter, Julia. The two were inseparable and went everywhere together. Julias parents said she could go. Can I go too? was Christines constant query to her parents. But with the onset of ce, as requests turned from afternoons riding bikes to dances and socializing with the kids in her class who were two years older, Christines parents decided to send their daughter to Allen to eliminate the possibility that she might be distracted from her studies. The Allen School was founded in 1887 by white United Methodist missionaries, with the goal of providing talented Negro s from Appalachian North Carolina with the best possible start in life. All the s had duty work assignments, the Allen School, another headlinemaking event had intruded upon her daily life. On May 17, 1954, she was still enrolled at the chester Avenue School in Monroe, North Carolina, her hometown. The principal of the school stepped into her eighthgrade classroom, interrupting the lesson with an announcement. I just came to let you all know that the Supreme Court just ruled on Brown v. Board of Education, and you will be going to school with white students in the future, he said. The same report that sparked conversation among Katherine Goble and her colleagues left Christine and her classmates agape. Located twentyfive miles down a ding road from Charlotte, Monroe, population seven thousand, was typical smalltown South. Everyone in the Newtown neighborhood, where Christine lived, from the doctor to the street sweeper to the teachers at the chester Avenue School, was black. Most of the black men in Monroe earned their living working for the railroad line that ran through the town. Black women held jobs in the Monroe Cotton Mill or as domestic servants. Virtually everyone and everything white in Monroe, including the white school and white residents, such as future US senator Jesse Helms, son of a former fire chief, existed across the dozen or so railroad tracks that sliced through the town like a combine. How will we, thought the students at chesterwith our rickety desks and dogeared secondhand textbooks, our poorly equipped to nonexistent science laboratorieshow could we compete with the white kids from the other side of the tracks? The principal spoke with such gravity that Christine and her classmates worried they might have to pack up their books and decamp for the other side of town at that very moment. http://www.moneysmakerslo.com/b8d86ggkO55chfd*xivLKhFxivLKhzilsf3f/spoiled-descriptives Letting us know your email on this screen will process your dismissal from our list of subcribers 547 S 7th St #473, Bismarck, ND 58504 http://www.moneysmakerslo.com/be78s9i55.BdKfdYxivLKhFxivLKhzils21f/spoiled-descriptives Cut out your name from our database by entering your information right here Townsend Neiland | 1643 Warwick Ave Pmb 322 Warwick Ri 02889-1525 What would it take for the country to prevail against this latest threat? Sputnik was proof, American policymakers assumed, that the Soviet Union had intercontinental ballistic missilesmany of them, hundreds perhaps, with the power to hurl an atomic weapon at US cities. A new term began to make the rounds in policy circles, the press, and private conversation: the missile gap. Black newspapers and their readers wasted no time in making the link between Americas inadequacy in space and the dreadful conditions facing many black students in the South. While we were forming mobs to drive an Autherine Lucy [the black woman who integrated the University of Alabama in 1956] from an Alabama campus, the Russians were compelling ALL children to attend the best possible schools, opined the Chicago Defender. Until the United States cured its Mississippiitisthat disease of segregation, violence, and oppression that plagued America like a chronic bout of consumptionthe paper declared, it would never merit the position of world leadership. An editorial in the Cleveland Call and Post echoed that sentiment. Who can say that it was not the institution of the Jim Crow School that has deprived this nation of the black scientist who might have solved the technological kinks delaying our satellite launching? wrote the papers editor and publisher, Charles H. Loeb. But segregation couldnt restrain Christines curiosity. Along with the anxiety that the Russians accomplishment provoked, Christine felt a sense of wonder, even a thrill, to see the skies above open so wide. The world beyond Earth had always been a mysterious place, Blackandyellow triangular fallout shelter signs proliferated in public spaces, pointing the way to underground refuge from radiation. Christine dutifully submitted to civil defense drills at school, ducking and covering under her desk, practicing the maneuver that adults said would protect her and her classmates from that telltale flash brighter than the sun. While students and teachers hoped their desks and basements would stand up to the power of a nuclear blast, the countrys leaders also prepared for a possible attackin high style. In one of the Cold Wars most unbelievable episodes, in 1959 President Eisenhower authorized the construction of a secret bunker deep under the Greenbrier hotel, the resort in White Sulphur Springs, West ia, where Katherine Goble, her father, Joshua Coleman, and Dorothy Vaughans husband, Howard, had all worked. Dubbed Project Greek Island, in the event of an attack on Washington, DC, senators and congressional representatives were to be evacuated from the nations capital by railroad and delivered to the Greenbriers bunker. There was no room in the bunker for spouses or children, but it was stocked with champagne and steaks for the politicians themselves. The luxury underground fortress remained operational and ready to receive its political guests until a 1992 exposé by Washington Post reporter Ted Gup blew the operations cover. Initially, President Eisenhower tried to poohpooh the Russians small ball in the air as an insignificant achievement, but the American people would have none of it. Sputnik, some experts declared, was nothing less than a technological Pearl Harbor. For the third time in the century, the United States found itself trailing technologically during a period of rising international tension. On the cusp of World War I, the countrys inadequate supply of aircraft had given birth to the NACA. The mediocre American aircraft industry of the 1930s rose to preeminence because of the challenge of World War II. one of the few black families in town who owned a car, a Pontiac Hydramatic, which Christines father used to go collect premiums from customers. Every day after work, Noah wheeled the big automobile into the driveway and asked his youngest daughter, What did you learn today? Sometimes Christine accompanied him on his rounds. When she was barely old enough to see over the dshield, Noah gave Christine driving lessons on quiet country roads. She loved it when her father taught her the tricks like priming the carburetor that would keep the temperamental machine on the road. Bold and curious, Christine learned to ride a bike by rolling at top speed down one of Monroes many hills, flying off in one direction like a daredevil at the bottom of the hill while the bicycle went banging off in another. Patching tires and adjusting the bikes brakes with a coat hanger became important parts of her mechanical repertoire. Dolls interested her mainly for what was inside them; her mother would catch her tearing out their stuffing so that she could see what was making them talk. Younger than her closest sibling by eight years, and nearly thirteen years younger than her oldest brother, Christines early life revolved around the routines of the grownup world. like Christines post at the library, a practical way to teach them responsibility and discipline. Many students came from workingclass or poor families; Christine was one of the few at the school who did not receive assistance to cover the costs of tuition and board. Despite the economic circumstances of the student body, Allen was considered one of the best Negro high schools in the country. Parents from as far away as New York sent their children to Allen for its rigorous liberal arts curriculum, its religious teaching, and its insistence on imparting social graces to its students. Band leader Cab Calloways niece attended in the 1940s. A 1950 graduate named Eunice Waymon had made her way from North Carolina to New York and was already in the process of transforming herself into the singer, pianist, and civil rights activist Nina Simone. Waves of homesickness washed over Christine in the fall of 1956, her first semester away from home. She phoned her parents every chance she could, begging them to let her return to the familiarity of Monroe. As the months rolled by, though, Christine came to love boarding school life. She opened herself to new friends, the stern but doting Methodist faculty, and the schools routine and rituals. A charismatic eleventhgrade geometry teacher stoked her interest in math, and for the first time, she entertained the idea of a future that took advantage of her knack for numbers and all things analytical. College, of course, wasnt a matter of if, but where. Most Allen graduates went on to higher education, some to prestigious northern schools like Vassar and Smith. In 1956, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, ia Tuckers alma mater, admitted its first black students, ------=_Part_307_2126258355.1487691148435 Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable =20 =20 youll thing this its crazy=20 =20 =20
Shortly after Christines birth, Desma Mann returned to teaching. Christine stayed home with a babysitter until she was old enough to accompany her mother each day to her job in a tworoom elementary school out in surrounding Union County. Across the street from the school stretched acres of cotton fields, the raw material for Monroes mill and the source of income for many county residents. The school year followed the picking season. Students sweltered in the desks throughout the North Carolina summer before being released in time for the harvest in September and October. With all potential playmates either in school or working in the fields, Christine entertained herself by joining in the lessons in her mothers classroom. By the time she turned five, Desma Manns youngest daughter was a secondgrade student, ready to attend the consolidated chester Avenue School in Monroe. Christine became best friends with the principals daughter, Julia. The two were inseparable and went everywhere together. Julias parents said she could go. Can I go too? was Christines constant query to her parents. But with the onset of ce, as requests turned from afternoons riding bikes to dances and socializing with the kids in her class who were two years older, Christines parents decided to send their daughter to Allen to eliminate the possibility that she might be distracted from her studies. The Allen School was founded in 1887 by white United Methodist missionaries, with the goal of providing talented Negro s from Appalachian North Carolina with the best possible start in life. All the s had duty work assignments,
=20
=20

Trump Now Considers Elon Musk His
Top Advisor=20 = =20 =20 =20 =20 =20
This is amazing and could be the best move= ever made by-Trump. Overnight its projected that millions-of jobs will be = created for every single American.

The inventor of-TESLA is the peoples choice and coudlnt be a better fit

Chck out the entire story=20
=20
3D"tw=
=20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20 =20
As with any-president, the pressure is tre= medous to turn things around and this seems like the first step that will c= hange everything

Start Reading On > >
=20

=20
the Allen School, another headlinemaking event had intruded upon her daily life. On May 17, 1954, she was still enrolled at the chester Avenue School in Monroe, North Carolina, her hometown. The principal of the school stepped into her eighthgrade classroom, interrupting the lesson with an announcement. I just came to let you all know that the Supreme Court just ruled on Brown v. Board of Education, and you will be going to school with white students in the future, he said. The same report that sparked conversation among Katherine Goble and her colleagues left Christine and her classmates agape. Located twentyfive miles down a ding road from Charlotte, Monroe, population seven thousand, was typical smalltown South. Everyone in the Newtown neighborhood, where Christine lived, from the doctor to the street sweeper to the teachers at the chester Avenue School, was black. Most of the black men in Monroe earned their living working for the railroad line that ran through the town. Black women held jobs in the Monroe Cotton Mill or as domestic servants. Virtually everyone and everything white in Monroe, including the white school and white residents, such as future US senator Jesse Helms, son of a former fire chief, existed across the dozen or so railroad tracks that sliced through the town like a combine. How will we, thought the students at chesterwith our rickety desks and dogeared secondhand textbooks, our poorly equipped to nonexistent science laboratorieshow could we compete with the white kids from the other side of the tracks? The principal spoke with such gravity that Christine and her classmates worried they might have to pack up their books and decamp for the other side of town at that very moment.
=20
What would it take for the country to prevail against this latest threat? Sputnik was proof, American policymakers assumed, that the Soviet Union had intercontinental ballistic missilesmany of them, hundreds perhaps, with the power to hurl an atomic weapon at US cities. A new term began to make the rounds in policy circles, the press, and private conversation: the missile gap. Black newspapers and their readers wasted no time in making the link between Americas inadequacy in space and the dreadful conditions facing many black students in the South. While we were forming mobs to drive an Autherine Lucy [the black woman who integrated the University of Alabama in 1956] from an Alabama campus, the Russians were compelling ALL children to attend the best possible schools, opined the Chicago Defender. Until the United States cured its Mississippiitisthat disease of segregation, violence, and oppression that plagued America like a chronic bout of consumptionthe paper declared, it would never merit the position of world leadership. An editorial in the Cleveland Call and Post echoed that sentiment. Who can say that it was not the institution of the Jim Crow School that has deprived this nation of the black scientist who might have solved the technological kinks delaying our satellite launching? wrote the papers editor and publisher, Charles H. Loeb. But segregation couldnt restrain Christines curiosity. Along with the anxiety that the Russians accomplishment provoked, Christine felt a sense of wonder, even a thrill, to see the skies above open so wide. The world beyond Earth had always been a mysterious place,
=20

=20

= Letting us know your email on this screen will = process your dismissal from our list of= subcribers
547 S 7th St #473, Bismarck, ND 58504

=20

Cut out your name f= rom our database by = entering your information right here
Townsend Neiland | 1643 Warwick Ave Pmb 322 Warwick Ri 02889-1525=

=20
Blackandyellow triangular fallout shelter signs proliferated in public spaces, pointing the way to underground refuge from radiation. Christine dutifully submitted to civil defense drills at school, ducking and covering under her desk, practicing the maneuver that adults said would protect her and her classmates from that telltale flash brighter than the sun. While students and teachers hoped their desks and basements would stand up to the power of a nuclear blast, the countrys leaders also prepared for a possible attackin high style. In one of the Cold Wars most unbelievable episodes, in 1959 President Eisenhower authorized the construction of a secret bunker deep under the Greenbrier hotel, the resort in White Sulphur Springs, West ia, where Katherine Goble, her father, Joshua Coleman, and Dorothy Vaughans husband, Howard, had all worked. Dubbed Project Greek Island, in the event of an attack on Washington, DC, senators and congressional representatives were to be evacuated from the nations capital by railroad and delivered to the Greenbriers bunker. There was no room in the bunker for spouses or children, but it was stocked with champagne and steaks for the politicians themselves. The luxury underground fortress remained operational and ready to receive its political guests until a 1992 exposé by Washington Post reporter Ted Gup blew the operations cover. Initially, President Eisenhower tried to poohpooh the Russians small ball in the air as an insignificant achievement, but the American people would have none of it. Sputnik, some experts declared, was nothing less than a technological Pearl Harbor. For the third time in the century, the United States found itself trailing technologically during a period of rising international tension. On the cusp of World War I, the countrys inadequate supply of aircraft had given birth to the NACA. The mediocre American aircraft industry of the 1930s rose to preeminence because of the challenge of World War II.
=20
one of the few black families in town who owned a car, a Pontiac Hydramatic, which Christines father used to go collect premiums from customers. Every day after work, Noah wheeled the big automobile into the driveway and asked his youngest daughter, What did you learn today? Sometimes Christine accompanied him on his rounds. When she was barely old enough to see over the dshield, Noah gave Christine driving lessons on quiet country roads. She loved it when her father taught her the tricks like priming the carburetor that would keep the temperamental machine on the road. Bold and curious, Christine learned to ride a bike by rolling at top speed down one of Monroes many hills, flying off in one direction like a daredevil at the bottom of the hill while the bicycle went banging off in another. Patching tires and adjusting the bikes brakes with a coat hanger became important parts of her mechanical repertoire. Dolls interested her mainly for what was inside them; her mother would catch her tearing out their stuffing so that she could see what was making them talk. Younger than her closest sibling by eight years, and nearly thirteen years younger than her oldest brother, Christines early life revolved around the routines of the grownup world.
=20
silent, dark, and cold, the realm of magic and gods. Wernher von Braun, the former Nazi rocket scientist granted amnesty by the United States after World War II in exchange for helping the country build a dominant missile program, functioned as the nations head space cheerleader. A series of articles that von Braun contributed to Colliers magazine in 1952Man Will Conquer Space Soonpresented space travel as the natural next step for the restless inhabitants of the Earth. American television viewers tuned in religiously to science fiction television programs like Space Patrol and Tales of Tomorrow. But Sputnik was anything but fiction, and it was happening today. Christine also took umbrage at the Soviets excursion into the heavens. From her core came the desire to rise up to meet the gauntlet they had thrown down. She was an American, after all, and the Russians were the enemy We cant let them beat us, she thought, echoing the sentiments of virtually every American citizen. It would take time for her to work it out, but somehow, even in those first moments of learning of the Soviet accomplishment, she believed that this was her fight too. The Soviet Union also thought it was Christines fight. Four days after launching Sputnik into orbit, Radio Moscow announced the addition of one more city to its timetable of destinations that would be overflown by their satellite: Little Rock, Arkansas. Three years earlier, before Christines parents had enrolled her as a student at
=20
like Christines post at the library, a practical way to teach them responsibility and discipline. Many students came from workingclass or poor families; Christine was one of the few at the school who did not receive assistance to cover the costs of tuition and board. Despite the economic circumstances of the student body, Allen was considered one of the best Negro high schools in the country. Parents from as far away as New York sent their children to Allen for its rigorous liberal arts curriculum, its religious teaching, and its insistence on imparting social graces to its students. Band leader Cab Calloways niece attended in the 1940s. A 1950 graduate named Eunice Waymon had made her way from North Carolina to New York and was already in the process of transforming herself into the singer, pianist, and civil rights activist Nina Simone. Waves of homesickness washed over Christine in the fall of 1956, her first semester away from home. She phoned her parents every chance she could, begging them to let her return to the familiarity of Monroe. As the months rolled by, though, Christine came to love boarding school life. She opened herself to new friends, the stern but doting Methodist faculty, and the schools routine and rituals. A charismatic eleventhgrade geometry teacher stoked her interest in math, and for the first time, she entertained the idea of a future that took advantage of her knack for numbers and all things analytical. College, of course, wasnt a matter of if, but where. Most Allen graduates went on to higher education, some to prestigious northern schools like Vassar and Smith. In 1956, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, ia Tuckers alma mater, admitted its first black students,
=20 3D""/ ------=_Part_307_2126258355.1487691148435--