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Subject: Consolidate Loans Into One Low Monthly Payment
Date: Fri, 7 Feb 2014 05:19:50 -0800
To: lojban@lojban.org
From: "Student Loan Assistance"
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Need help with those Student Loan payments?
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over the last four decades, according to 2011 research by the
Worldwatch Institute. But with increased production come concerns about
greenhouse emissions, animal welfare and the health risks of eating red
meat.Meat substitutes are nothing new. Asian cultures have been using seitan
(a protein made with wheat gluten) since the 7th century, and veggie
burgers have been a supermarket staple since the 1980s.More people become
concerned about the environment and want to know where their food is
coming from, and these foods reduce the risk of food-borne illnesses like
e-Coli and Salmonella poisoning.Thats why scientists and entrepreneurs see
meat replacements not only as alternatives, but as big moneymakers, too.Todays
next-gen products use everything from peas to non-GMO soy, wheat gluten,
pea protein and grains to replicate the taste, texture and culinary viability
of animal products.Were looking at how we can create value-added products
with benefits that far exceed what [consumers] get from just eating meat,
says Ethan Brown, CEO of Beyond Meat. Its like Beef 2.0 and
Chicken 2.0, he quips.Beyond Meats plant-based Chicken-Free Strips hit the
market last year, boasting that they contain all the protein, taste and
chew of chicken but without the antibiotics, hormones, GMOs, transfats
and cholesterol.Next month the company will release a beef replacement,
which Brown says is revolutionary both in its mouthfeel and the fact
that its made wit
Jan. 30, 2014: In this Thursday photo, residents attend a devotional at
the Salvation Army in Los Banos, Calif. After the spiritual service, they
each collect a bag of free food. Leaders at the Los Banos
Salvation Army fear that the states drought will cause more people to
need food this year because they wont have jobs on Central Valley
farms.APMENDOTA, Calif. Religious leaders of multiple faiths and farmers
in Nevada and Utah turned to prayer this weekend for help easing
severe drought conditions gripping the West.The plea to above comes weeks
after the federal government declared parts of 11 parched Western and Central
states natural disaster areas.Faith leaders asked for divine intervention
during a special multifaith service Saturday at a Mormon church in the
Reno suburb of Sparks. And on Sunday, the Utah Farm Bureau Federation
asked the public to join in prayer and fasting for snow and
rain for livestock and crops as part of its Harvesting Faith event."We
can't go to the Legislature to ask for help, (so) we decided
to go to the guy upstairs," Ron Gibson, a dairy farmer in
Weber County, Utah, told the Deseret News. "One thing you learn as
a farmer is most of the things that happen in your life
are totally out of your control."Rajan Zed, who organized the Nevada service,
said Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Jewish, Baha'i and other faith
leaders who participated are confident it'll bring positive results."When
God sees (all t
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Need help with those Student Loan payments?
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February 1, 2014: This photo released by Dartmouth Varsity Athletics Communications
shows cross-country ski team member Torin Tucker. Tucker died Saturday
while competing at the Vermont Carnival. (AP Photo/Dartmouth University,
Ruff Patterson)CRAFTSBURY, Vt. Dartmouth College says that a 20-year-old
member of its cross-country ski team died at an event in Vermont.Dartmouth
spokesman Rick Bender says that Torin Tucker died while competing at the
Vermont Carnival Saturday. Tucker is a junior from Sun Valley, Idaho.Bender
says that the junior died at the scene after attempts to resuscitate
him failed. The cause of his death is still under investigation.The team
returned to campus and won't complete in the rest of the Vermont
Carnival.Dartmouth President Philip Hanlon shared the news through a campus-wide
email and urged students, faculty and staff to contact the school's safety
and security department if they or someone they know needs to speak
with a counselor or chaplain.
CLARKSBURG, W.Va. A 300-foot cellphone tower collapsed Saturday and minutes
later a smaller tower fell, killing two contractors and a firefighter, authorities
said.The contractors were tethered to the larger tower when it collapsed
in Clarksburg, State Police Cpl. Mark Waggamon said. A firefighter with
the Nutter Fort Fire Department was killed when he was walking from
his vehicle to the scene.Two other contractors working on the larger tower
were hurt and taken to a hospital. Waggamon described their injuries as
serious but not life-threatening.Waggamon said three of the workers were
more than 60 feet up on the tower. One of those workers
was killed along with a co-worker who was about 20 feet up
when the tower toppled.Two other workers at the site were not injured.Waggamon
said the weight of the collapsed tower put stress on guide wires
to the smaller tower.The crew was doing maintenance to strengthen the tower's
support when the accident occurred, Waggamon said. He said the federal Occupational
Safety and Health Administration will investigate.The towers are owned by
SBA Communications, which hired workers from S&S Communications to remove
the tall tower's diagonal supports and replace them with new ones. Phone
messages left with the companies were not returned Saturday evening.Steven
Thompson, a member of the Summit Park Volunteer Fire Department, said about
three dozen people from eight fire departments in the area responded. He
s
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