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POPSCall yourself in the Future. I'm sure there are others who will find this useful. They say this is a demo, so the server may 'Max Out', and they suggest trying again later. Clipping the time to call took up too many characters, because the clip of a drop down field includes all of the characters that are unseen.
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POPSGitmo Turns Five Guantánamo is not just a prison. It is an entirely new kind of penal institution that perfectly embodies the Administration's new paradigm for a never-ending, ubiquitous "war on terror."
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POPSWhat Will They Come Up With Next??? I LOVE Snopes.com...If you get an email that is just too weird, too good to be true, just too awful...it's usually bogus. Every once in a while, something is actually true, or a mixture of truth and lies. Snopes checks them out and tells the truth. It's a fun site just to play around on when nothing else catches your interest. Enjoy.
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POPSGrassroots Claim Credit in Outcome of Immigration Fight This was amazing considering just a week ago (and longer) this Bill was considered a done-deal. Chernoff (sp) sneered as he promised traumatic events ahead as they began enforcing the rounding up and deportment of Illegals. They should have been doing this all along. Then it wouldn't be as traumatic!!! Build the dang fence, fine the stew out of those who hire illegals and deport all family members back to their place of origin. Then, make the process of *legal* immigration fair for all. Do it methodically, consistently, judicially. This crossed party lines. Americans recognized that their representatives were NOT doing the will of the people.
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POPSClipWeek! Just got this, the idea is great. By the way, if you can enter my mailbox through the source link, let me know. :p
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POPSLots Of People Reading The Same Book On DailyLit Realizing that he is actually aging in reverse, Benjamin relies on dyeing his hair and shaving his beard during his childhood and youth to try and appear at least close to his biological age. No matter how well he might hide his secret, however, Benjamin knows that life will always be very different for him. As he grows older (and younger), he meets and falls in love with a beautiful woman, Hildegarde, who happens to be attracted to older men. Benjamin and Hildegarde marry and are happy—but only for a time. As Hildegarde grows older, Benjamin's increasingly young heart yearns for freedom. Will this very strange man ever be able to find happiness even as he goes through life backwards? An odd and intriguing fable, this 1922 tale is one of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s most unusual and memorable.