Total Pageviews

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Candy Striper of George W Bush and Barack Obama

The nice part of a Candy Striper they are volunteers and covered by the Good Samaritan law both State and Federal Laws of Suit the best part out of The Federal Convention is no Compensation is paid for Office of President how does one become Candy Striper in the Highest of the Land is taking the Office of President of The United States by 9/10's of the Law again leaving the Courts out or The Presidential Elector out from the office so the two of you dig deep to pay back what was taken

https://goo.gl/66XFN5

https://goo.gl/QOjRkC

https://goo.gl/HqEkC2

Supreme Court Previews for the week of October 13, 2015

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Legal Information Institute [LII]" <Legal_Information_Institute_LII@mail.vresp.com>
Date: Oct 6, 2015 9:03 AM
Subject: Supreme Court Previews for the week of October 13, 2015
To: <g.pera44@gmail.com>
Cc:

[LII] Legal Information Institute | Cornell Law School

Sponsor the LII Bulletin

class action, standing, mootness, Telephone Consumer Protection Act
Oral argument:
October 14, 2015
Court below:
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

Issues:
  1. Does a claim become moot when the plaintiff receives an offer of complete relief; and does the answer change if that plaintiff purports to represent an uncertified class?
  2. Does the doctrine of derivative sovereign immunity extend generally to government contractors acting within the scope of their contract, or is it limited to claims of property damage related to public works projects?
Federal Power Act, Federal Energy Regulatory Commision, Electric Energy, Demand Response, Administrative Procedure Act
Oral argument:
October 14, 2015
Court below:
United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit

Issues:

May the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC") pay retail customers to consume less electricity in order to balance supply and demand in the wholesale-market electricity grid?

sentencing, Sixth Amendment, eighth amendment, death penalty
Oral argument:
October 13, 2015
Court below:
Florida Supreme Court

Issues:

Can Florida's death sentencing scheme be considered constitutional if it does not require jury unanimity in capital cases and it consigns the jury to an advisory role in sentencing?

Juvenile Justice, criminal procedure, Substantive Law, eighth amendment, habeas corpus
Oral argument:
October 13, 2015
Court below:
Louisiana Supreme Court

Issues:

Does the Supreme Court's decision in Miller v. Alabama, which held that the Eighth Amendment prohibits mandatory sentencing schemes requiring juveniles to be sentenced to life in prison without parole, apply retroactively to cases on collateral review, and does the Supreme Court have jurisdiction to decide this issue?


Donate to LII: online or by check

Follow @LIICornell on Twitter: http://twitter.com/LIICornell

Friend us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Law.LII




Click to view this email in a browser

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, please reply to this message with "Unsubscribe" in the subject line or simply click on the following link: Unsubscribe

Legal Information Institute [LII]
477 Myron Taylor Hall
Ithaca, New York 14853
US

Read the VerticalResponse marketing policy.

Try Email Marketing with VerticalResponse!

New forecasts, amazing sky, storing potatoes

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "The Old Farmer's Almanac" <Old_Farmers_Almanac@yankeepub.com>
Date: Oct 6, 2015 6:03 AM
Subject: New forecasts, amazing sky, storing potatoes
To: <guyperea1@gmail.com>
Cc:

Having trouble reading this email? View Online Version
New to this newsletter? It's free! Sign up here.
The OFA Companion Header Logo

Share this newsletter:
   Email this offer to a friend 

 

Almanac Companion Newsletter

October 6, 2015

 

Weather Astronomy Gardening Best Days Cooking Home & Health Shop


Bright yellow, red and orange,
The leaves come down in hosts;
The trees are Indian princes,
But soon they'll turn to ghosts.

–William Allingham (1824–89)

 

Get 3 FREE Gifts! 

Weather

November weather posted!

The first month of weather predictions from the new 2016 Old Farmer's Almanac is posted. See November forecasts for your region.

Astronomy

Should we care about magnetism?


It seems almost like science fiction. Bob shares the discovery of magnetic "neutron stars"—powerful enough to affect the universe. Discover our amazing sky.

Food

How to store your potatoes

Celeste shows us how to get potatoes prepared for winter storage and ready for the root cellar.

Gardening

So, what makes a plant native?


A native plant is one that was growing in North America before European settlement. Read more about "going native."

 


 

The Old Farmer's Almanac General Store Online
2016 Calendars

 

 

Almanac for Kids, Volume 6

Weather
Astronomy
Gardening
Best Days
Cooking
Home & Health
Shop
Share this email with your network on facebookShare this email with your network on twitterForward to a Friend
You are receiving this e-mail message because you subscribed at our Web site: Almanac.com


If you do not wish to receive our regular e-mail newsletter in the future, please click here to unsubscribe.

*Please do not reply to this e-mail*
Visit our Web site Help page to report corrections or inquire about your online account, products, editorial, and technical issues.

For reprinting and reuse, see our Terms of Use. © 2015 Yankee Publishing Inc. All rights reserved.



GDACS daily newsletter for 06/10/2015

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "GDACS" <gdacs-noreply@jrc.ec.europa.eu>
Date: Oct 6, 2015 2:03 AM
Subject: GDACS daily newsletter for 06/10/2015
To: <gdacs-noreply@jrc.ec.europa.eu>
Cc:

 

Global Disaster Alert and Coordination System — Newsletter 06/10/2015

This daily newsletter provides an overview of the natural disasters that happened in the last 24 hours and response measures for ongoing disasters. GDACS currently covers earthquakes, tsunamis, tropical cyclones, volcanic eruptions and floods. The color coding (red, orange, green) is related to the estimated humanitarian impact of the event.

dots

Disaster events in the last 24 hours

GDACS detected the following potential disasters. For up-to-date media coverage, latest maps and ReliefWeb content related to these disasters, please go to GDACS homepage.

map Green alert for tropical cyclone JOAQUIN-15. Population affected by Category 1 (120 km/h) wind speeds or higher is 0.
From 28/09/2015 to 06/10/2015, a Hurricane/Typhoon > 74 mph (maximum wind speed of 250 km/h) JOAQUIN-15 was active in Atlantic. The cyclone affects these countries: Bahamas (vulnerability Low). Estimated population affected by category 1 (120 km/h) wind speeds or higher is 0.
map Green alert for tropical cyclone OHO-15. Population affected by Category 1 (120 km/h) wind speeds or higher is 0.
From 03/10/2015 to 06/10/2015, a Tropical Storm (maximum wind speed of 120 km/h) OHO-15 was active in CentralPacific. The cyclone affects these countries: [unknown] (vulnerability [unknown]). Estimated population affected by category 1 (120 km/h) wind speeds or higher is 0.
map Green alert for tropical cyclone CHOI-WAN-15. Population affected by Category 1 (120 km/h) wind speeds or higher is 0.
From 02/10/2015 to 06/10/2015, a Hurricane/Typhoon > 74 mph (maximum wind speed of 148 km/h) CHOI-WAN-15 was active in NWPacific. The cyclone affects these countries: Russian Federation, Japan, United States Minor Outlying Islands (vulnerability Low). Estimated population affected by category 1 (120 km/h) wind speeds or higher is 0.
map Green earthquake alert (Magnitude 5.9M, Depth:34km) in Chile 05/10/2015 16:33 UTC, 537631 people within 100km.
On 10/5/2015 4:33:26 PM, an earthquake occurred in Chile potentially affecting 537631 people within 100km. The earthquake had Magnitude 5.9M, Depth:34km.
map Green earthquake alert (Magnitude 4.5M, Depth:10km) in Nepal 05/10/2015 07:33 UTC, 7183533 people within 100km.
On 10/5/2015 7:33:22 AM, an earthquake occurred in Nepal potentially affecting 7183533 people within 100km. The earthquake had Magnitude 4.5M, Depth:10km.

dots

Discussions in Virtual OSOCC

The GDACS Virtual OSOCC is a forum for emergency managers. If you are involved in an ongoing emergency as a local emergency management authority or as an international responder, please provide your information in the GDACS Virtual OSOCC. The following emergencies are currently open.

Open emergencies
Myanmar Floods
3-August-2015

updated: 13-August-2015
7.9M Earthquake in Nepal on 25 Apr 2015 06:11 UTC
25-Apr-2015

updated: 9-August-2015
EQ-2015-000048-NPL
Typhoon Maysak - FS Micronesia
31-March-2015

updated: 14-Apr-2015
Chile - floods
26-March-2015

updated: 27-Apr-2015
FL-2015-000027-CHL
Tropical Cyclone Pam
11-March-2015

updated: 30-July-2015
TC-2015-000023-VUT
Typhoon Chan-hom
11-July-2015

updated: 11-July-2015

dots

You receive this newsletter because you subscribed on GDACS. To change your notification settings, please log in at http://register.gdacs.org. The information of GDACS is provided by the following partners: European Commission JRC, United Nations OCHA, Dartmouth Flood Observatory, Pacific Disaster Centre, USGS National Earthquake Information Centre, European Mediterranean Seismological Centre, Global Volcanism Program and UNOSAT.

Created on 06 Oct 2015 08:00 +02:00.

dots

Joint Initiative of the United Nations and the European Commission
OCHA
JRC
UNOSAT
Reproduction authorised provided the source is acknowledged, except for commercial purposes.
©European Commission 2004-2012

dots

Monday, October 5, 2015

Planting Fall/Winter Lettuce and Spinach Celeste Longacre

For those of us living in the north, the days are about to become cooler with nights approaching darn near cold. With a little bit of planning, however, this doesn't mean the end of our growing season. It's time to plant some fall/winter lettuce and spinach. And, if we don't mind some extra work, these two crops just might return to us in the spring. Those in warmer climes can do the same thing but might want to wait until the end of September to start.
Prepare the bed as usual. Add whatever soil amendments you (or your soils) prefer—I generally add kelp meal, organic alfalfa meal, greensand and Azomite powder. Sprinkle it around the top. Use a broad fork or pitchfork to gently loosen the soil then rake it flat. Check to make sure that your varieties are ones that can make it through the winter then broadcast them over the bed; this means planting them everywhere instead of just in rows. Cover with a nice dusting of old compost or manure. Water well.

As with most seeds, you will need to keep the top of the bed wet until the seedlings appear. Check it at least twice a day perhaps more often if it is hot and dry. After several days, the plants will appear. Thin and thin again as each seedling runs out of room to grow. Once they reach the size of a soup spoon, you can harvest them and bring them inside to eat. Yum! Enjoy!