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Season 7, Episode 10
Law and Order, SVU "Storm"
http://lawandorder.wikia.com/wiki/Storm
Benson puts everything on the line so that she can get the truth out there.
The reporter states to Benson that in a free society you need freedom of the press.
Medford City Hall is hell bent on shutting down this website.
We'll announce our legal defense fund soon,
and that the Administration of Stephony Muccini-Burke wants to keep you, dear resident, in the dark.
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THE BLOG
A stolen election destroyed much of what America stands for when Dick Cheney put his puppet, George W. Bush in office (so unpopular these days that he destroyed Jeb Bush's hopes to be president.)
In Medford, the election stolen by the previous Administration gives us a female George W., the unqualified hack, Stephanie Muccini-Burke.
See the damage that the shake-up of the Supreme Court caused...and think of how Medford is in as much danger as a tree on Metcalf facing the executioner.
The Supreme Court and the Republican Coup D’état
In 2005, President George W. Bush nominated John Roberts to succeed Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. At this time, Justice O’Connor was the Court’s pivotal “swing” Justice. In many of the Court’s most important cases, she cast the deciding vote. Moreover, she generally leaned left on such controversial issues as abortion, the rights of gays and lesbians, affirmative action, and campaign finance reform. There was thus little doubt that, if confirmed, John Roberts, who was well-known for his conservative views, would move the Court significantly to the right.
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the death of a tree at Tufts
June 1, 2015
The
landmark copper beech tree behind Ballou Hall that has given birth to
lore and legend for more than 150 years on the Tufts campus has finally
met its end.
After surviving the hurricanes and blizzards of New England’s capricious weather, the tree sustained a lethal blow from a random lightning bolt about a year ago.
“I knew it had to be a lightning strike when one side of the tree started dying before the other over the past year,” says John Vik, a certified arborist and staff grounds supervisor. A consulting arborist confirmed the diagnosis in January, when the progressive death of limbs on the tree’s south side was visible and most of the bark missing. Now, sadly, the entire tree has died and must come down, Vik says.
After surviving the hurricanes and blizzards of New England’s capricious weather, the tree sustained a lethal blow from a random lightning bolt about a year ago.
“I knew it had to be a lightning strike when one side of the tree started dying before the other over the past year,” says John Vik, a certified arborist and staff grounds supervisor. A consulting arborist confirmed the diagnosis in January, when the progressive death of limbs on the tree’s south side was visible and most of the bark missing. Now, sadly, the entire tree has died and must come down, Vik says.
The landmark copper beech tree behind Ballou Hall that has given birth to lore and legend for more than 150 years on the Tufts campus has finally met its end. After surviving the hurricanes and blizzards of New England’s capricious weather, the tree sustained a lethal blow from a random lightning bolt about a year ago. “I knew it had to be a lightning strike when one side of the tree started dying before the other over the past year,” says John Vik, a certified arborist and staff grounds supervisor. A consulting arborist confirmed the diagnosis in January, when the progressive death of limbs on the tree’s south side was visible and most of the bark missing. Now, sadly, the entire tree has died and must come down, Vik says. - See more at: http://now.tufts.edu/articles/more-
just-tree#sthash.enxolVcR.dpuf By Gail Bambrick June 1, 2015 reddit PrintPrint EmailEmail The landmark copper beech tree behind Ballou Hall that has given birth to lore and legend for more than 150 years on the Tufts campus has finally met its end. After surviving the hurricanes and blizzards of New England’s capricious weather, the tree sustained a lethal blow from a random lightning bolt about a year ago.
“I knew it had to be a lightning strike when one side of the tree started dying before the other over the past year,” says John Vik, a certified arborist and staff grounds supervisor. A consulting arborist confirmed the diagnosis in January, when the progressive death of limbs on the tree’s south side was visible and most of the bark missing. Now, sadly, the entire tree has died and must come down, Vik says. - See more at: http://now.tufts.edu/articles/more-just-tree#sthash.enxolVcR.dpuf