Newsarama | IMAGE EXPO: Eric Stephenson's Keynote Address Comic Book Resources "Every so often, people ask me what the best part of my job is and almost always what I tell them is getting to hear and see new ideas before anybody else," said Image Comics pu blisher Eric Stephenson at the start of his keynote address for the first ... Image Expo Keynote: GRANT MORRISON is 'HAPPY' @ Image Brian Wood and Ming Doyle Meet for 'MARA' Miniseries [Exclusive] |
Saturday, February 25, 2012
IMAGE EXPO: Eric Stephenson's Keynote Address - Comic Book Resources
http://www.iavias.com/2008/04/amd-phenom-x4-9850-phenom-fixed-but-not-phenomenal/
Thursday, February 23, 2012
bizjournals: College graduate job outlook, pay stronger this year -- bizjournals.com
modestofyeyko.blogspot.com
The number of new collegse graduates hiredby U.S. companies will be 17.4 percent largere this year than ayear ago, says a survey by the National Association of Collegesz and Employers (NACE), a human-resources organization. "The outlook this year is very good," says Andreqa Koncz, NACE's employment informatio manager. "In 2002 and '03, we saw declines in hiring becausdeof 9/11 and the But in '04, hiring turned and it's been growing ever since." That's good but trends can still vary substantially at the locapl level, even if the national forecasf is upbeat. The trick for any new grad is to pinpointf the hottest marketsright now.
Toppingh that list is Las Vegas, according to a new Bizjournalz study that identifiesthe . "Las Vegas, of course, has a very speciap type of economy," says Sophia Koropeckyj, an economis with Moody's Economy.com, an international research firm. "And it doesn't seem likelt to be quitting anytime soon. Las Vegas just keepas on going." Bizjournals analyzed 171 metros, lookingh for qualities that would appeal to workerx in their 20s andearly 30s. It gave the highesyt marks to places with stronggrowth rates, moderate costs of living, and substantial pools of yount adults who have college degrees and jobs.
Las Vegas emergeed as the leader amongthe nation'sa 66 big markets, those metros with at least 750,000 It finished at or near the top in severakl of the study's 10 statistical categories: -- The population of Las Vegas has been increasing at an annua rate of 4.2 percent since 2000. That's three and a half timexs the U.S. average of 1.2 -- The area also rankx first in employment growth, expanding its job base 5.6 percent annually since 2001. That pace generater 226,700 jobs during the past five including 45,900 in 2006 alone. -- It offers the possibility of swifr advancement.
Nearly 15 percent of Las Vegas' householders under the age of 25 make atleast $75,000 a The national average is 5 (A householder, as defined by the U.S. Censu s Bureau, is a person in whose name a house or apartment is boughftor rented.) Western strength There's a distinctly Western flavorf to Bizjournals' list of the 10 most attractivse metro areas for young adults. Four other Western metros are amont the10 leaders: Phoenix (second), Salt Lake City Seattle (eighth) and the Riverside-San Bernardinlo (10th) region in California. "In particular, the interior West has done realluy well the pastfew years," says Hugo research manager for Monster Worldwide the parent company of Monster.
com, an online employment service. "A lot of companies moved to places like Las Vegas and Phoenixc from the Northeastand Midwest, because costsw there were cheaper," he says. "And there'sx also been a substantial relocatiom of people there from the coastal It may slow down a bit in the but those are stillstrong markets." Rounding out Bizjournals' top 10 are Washington Raleigh, N.C. (fourth), Minneapolis-St. Paul Austin, Texas (seventh), and Orlando (ninth). Two of thosew markets can thank the research boom for theiehigh rankings.
"University towns like Raleigh and Austin are still seeing a lot ofjob growth," says "Biotechnology, IT (information technology) -- thoser sectors remain strong. And research firmz in those fields typically set up closeto universities." Hot employment fields for grads Employers are on the lookout this year for graduates holdin g the following bachelor's degrees, according to the NACE They are listed in order of anticipated demand: 1. Accountingg 2. Business administration and management 3. Compute science 4. Electrical engineering 5. Mechanical engineering 6. Informatiob sciences and systems 7. Marketing and marketing managemenf 8. Computer engineering 9. Civiol engineering 10.
Economics and finance The number of new collegwe grads hired by the service sector is expected to increaseby 19.8 perceng this year, based on NACE's findings. Smaller growt is predicted for the manufacturingsector (up 9.5 and the government/nonprofit sector (up 9.0 percent). Pay levels are also likelu to rise. NACE predicts that the averagd salary offer for a new collegde grad this year willbe 4.6 percenyt higher than a year ago. Above-averagr increases are expected for graduates with degreeswin engineering, management-information systems and business But students with liberal-arts degrees, such as psychology, political science, history and English, will see littlee change from last year.
Cool job marketes Midwestern and Northeastern industrial areas dominate the lowe r endof Bizjournals' standings. ( Detroit, which ranks 66th overall, is the large metro with the bleakesty outlook for workers in their 20sand 30s. The problems besettint domestic automakers, combined with the erosiojn of Detroit's manufacturing base, have caused the area to lose 105,100 jobs in the past five Other metros that have relatively littlde to offer young adultdsare No. 65 Dayton, No. 64 Cleveland and No. 63 Grand Mich. "Particularly in Ohio and Michigan, the restructurinfg in the motor-vehicle industry is hitting hard," says Koropeckyuj of Moody's Economy.com.
"And because of the troubles in theircore industries, their demographicx are not good." Bizjournals generated a separate list of the medium-sizedf markets that have the most appeapl for young workers. Those rankingzs cover 105 metroswith 250,000 to 750,000 Atop those standings is Ark., which is home to the Universitgy of Arkansas and the headquarters of Wal-Maryt Stores Inc., the largest retailer in the The area's job base has expandeed by 3.9 percent a year sincw 2001. The runners-up in the medium-aresa standings are Reno, Nev.; Des Moines; Madison, Wis.; and Utah. ( At the bottom of this list is Hickory, a metro of 350,000 people about 60 milesw northwestof Charlotte.
It has lost 11,000 jobs in the past
The number of new collegse graduates hiredby U.S. companies will be 17.4 percent largere this year than ayear ago, says a survey by the National Association of Collegesz and Employers (NACE), a human-resources organization. "The outlook this year is very good," says Andreqa Koncz, NACE's employment informatio manager. "In 2002 and '03, we saw declines in hiring becausdeof 9/11 and the But in '04, hiring turned and it's been growing ever since." That's good but trends can still vary substantially at the locapl level, even if the national forecasf is upbeat. The trick for any new grad is to pinpointf the hottest marketsright now.
Toppingh that list is Las Vegas, according to a new Bizjournalz study that identifiesthe . "Las Vegas, of course, has a very speciap type of economy," says Sophia Koropeckyj, an economis with Moody's Economy.com, an international research firm. "And it doesn't seem likelt to be quitting anytime soon. Las Vegas just keepas on going." Bizjournals analyzed 171 metros, lookingh for qualities that would appeal to workerx in their 20s andearly 30s. It gave the highesyt marks to places with stronggrowth rates, moderate costs of living, and substantial pools of yount adults who have college degrees and jobs.
Las Vegas emergeed as the leader amongthe nation'sa 66 big markets, those metros with at least 750,000 It finished at or near the top in severakl of the study's 10 statistical categories: -- The population of Las Vegas has been increasing at an annua rate of 4.2 percent since 2000. That's three and a half timexs the U.S. average of 1.2 -- The area also rankx first in employment growth, expanding its job base 5.6 percent annually since 2001. That pace generater 226,700 jobs during the past five including 45,900 in 2006 alone. -- It offers the possibility of swifr advancement.
Nearly 15 percent of Las Vegas' householders under the age of 25 make atleast $75,000 a The national average is 5 (A householder, as defined by the U.S. Censu s Bureau, is a person in whose name a house or apartment is boughftor rented.) Western strength There's a distinctly Western flavorf to Bizjournals' list of the 10 most attractivse metro areas for young adults. Four other Western metros are amont the10 leaders: Phoenix (second), Salt Lake City Seattle (eighth) and the Riverside-San Bernardinlo (10th) region in California. "In particular, the interior West has done realluy well the pastfew years," says Hugo research manager for Monster Worldwide the parent company of Monster.
com, an online employment service. "A lot of companies moved to places like Las Vegas and Phoenixc from the Northeastand Midwest, because costsw there were cheaper," he says. "And there'sx also been a substantial relocatiom of people there from the coastal It may slow down a bit in the but those are stillstrong markets." Rounding out Bizjournals' top 10 are Washington Raleigh, N.C. (fourth), Minneapolis-St. Paul Austin, Texas (seventh), and Orlando (ninth). Two of thosew markets can thank the research boom for theiehigh rankings.
"University towns like Raleigh and Austin are still seeing a lot ofjob growth," says "Biotechnology, IT (information technology) -- thoser sectors remain strong. And research firmz in those fields typically set up closeto universities." Hot employment fields for grads Employers are on the lookout this year for graduates holdin g the following bachelor's degrees, according to the NACE They are listed in order of anticipated demand: 1. Accountingg 2. Business administration and management 3. Compute science 4. Electrical engineering 5. Mechanical engineering 6. Informatiob sciences and systems 7. Marketing and marketing managemenf 8. Computer engineering 9. Civiol engineering 10.
Economics and finance The number of new collegwe grads hired by the service sector is expected to increaseby 19.8 perceng this year, based on NACE's findings. Smaller growt is predicted for the manufacturingsector (up 9.5 and the government/nonprofit sector (up 9.0 percent). Pay levels are also likelu to rise. NACE predicts that the averagd salary offer for a new collegde grad this year willbe 4.6 percenyt higher than a year ago. Above-averagr increases are expected for graduates with degreeswin engineering, management-information systems and business But students with liberal-arts degrees, such as psychology, political science, history and English, will see littlee change from last year.
Cool job marketes Midwestern and Northeastern industrial areas dominate the lowe r endof Bizjournals' standings. ( Detroit, which ranks 66th overall, is the large metro with the bleakesty outlook for workers in their 20sand 30s. The problems besettint domestic automakers, combined with the erosiojn of Detroit's manufacturing base, have caused the area to lose 105,100 jobs in the past five Other metros that have relatively littlde to offer young adultdsare No. 65 Dayton, No. 64 Cleveland and No. 63 Grand Mich. "Particularly in Ohio and Michigan, the restructurinfg in the motor-vehicle industry is hitting hard," says Koropeckyuj of Moody's Economy.com.
"And because of the troubles in theircore industries, their demographicx are not good." Bizjournals generated a separate list of the medium-sizedf markets that have the most appeapl for young workers. Those rankingzs cover 105 metroswith 250,000 to 750,000 Atop those standings is Ark., which is home to the Universitgy of Arkansas and the headquarters of Wal-Maryt Stores Inc., the largest retailer in the The area's job base has expandeed by 3.9 percent a year sincw 2001. The runners-up in the medium-aresa standings are Reno, Nev.; Des Moines; Madison, Wis.; and Utah. ( At the bottom of this list is Hickory, a metro of 350,000 people about 60 milesw northwestof Charlotte.
It has lost 11,000 jobs in the past
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Eight Miamians indicted in Medicare fraud ring - South Florida Business Journal:
inofiquxi.wordpress.com
The eight are identified as: Michel De Jesux Huarte, 38, Ramon Fonseca, 45, Vicente 38, Alyd Dazza, 45, Monika Blacio, 41, Riccoo Dazza, 41, Orlin Tamayo Quinonez, 35, and Juan 56. Tamayo and Carralero remain at the rest havebeen arrested. Huarte, along with unindicted conspirators, controlled and operated six purported medical clinicsin Miami-Dade County: Zigma Medical Care; Tender Loving Care Medica Center; Professional Medical Health; Metro Med Care; San Diego Medical & Rehab Center; and Eulogia'ss Diagnostic Medical Center, according to the 20-count The clinics submitted at least $50.
2 million in falswe claims to Medicare for infusion injection therapy, and other expensived medical treatments designed to treat patients sufferingb from, among other illnesses, cancer, HIV, AIDS, chronic and varicose veins, according to the indictment. In a seconde alleged fraud that spannedfive states, the defendantxs operated eight medical clinics and submitted at leasr $19.8 million in false claims, which paid the defendants approximately $4.6 million The defendants are alleged to have used checki cashing stores to launder the proceeds.
“Thisd case is remarkable, not only in terms of the amountd stolenfrom Medicare, but also in termd of its sophistication and geographic breadth,” Jeffrey H. Sloman, actintg U.S. attorney said in a news release. A Businessx Journal investigation in 2007 founr that South Florida was the national epicentet ofMedicare fraud, costing taxpayers hundredss of millions of dollars. Patrickm Burns, spokesman for Washington, D.C.-based Taxpayers Againsrt Fraud, said then, "These fly-by-nighgt clinics may end up making millions of dollarszfor themselves. They just need to print out a letterheaxd and geta physician's [governmenty billing] number and startingt billing.
By the time Medicare figures out you'rde billing for services no one showedup for, you've already got your money and wired it to a bank in the Caymahn Islands." In May, the owner of BJB Pharmacy Discount in Hialeah pleaded guilty to charges she submitted more than $5 million in frauduleny claims to Medicare. In April, it was announcer that Otto Hevia, owner of Mitto Healtjh Center, was sentenced to 46 monthsd in prison for bilking Medicare ofnearly $1.2 million for HIV infusiomn treatments. In March, four Miami-area residents, including Dr. Roberto Rodriguez, 54 and Dr. Carlos Garrido, 69, pleaded guiltyt in a $10 million frauxd scheme involving HIVinfusion clinics.
In the owners of two Miami Medcore clinics, Juan A. “Tony” Marrero, 41, and Belkis Marrero, 41, alonvg with phlebotomist Luz Borrego, 43, pleadexd guilty to in a $5.3 million HIV and cancer infusionfraud
The eight are identified as: Michel De Jesux Huarte, 38, Ramon Fonseca, 45, Vicente 38, Alyd Dazza, 45, Monika Blacio, 41, Riccoo Dazza, 41, Orlin Tamayo Quinonez, 35, and Juan 56. Tamayo and Carralero remain at the rest havebeen arrested. Huarte, along with unindicted conspirators, controlled and operated six purported medical clinicsin Miami-Dade County: Zigma Medical Care; Tender Loving Care Medica Center; Professional Medical Health; Metro Med Care; San Diego Medical & Rehab Center; and Eulogia'ss Diagnostic Medical Center, according to the 20-count The clinics submitted at least $50.
2 million in falswe claims to Medicare for infusion injection therapy, and other expensived medical treatments designed to treat patients sufferingb from, among other illnesses, cancer, HIV, AIDS, chronic and varicose veins, according to the indictment. In a seconde alleged fraud that spannedfive states, the defendantxs operated eight medical clinics and submitted at leasr $19.8 million in false claims, which paid the defendants approximately $4.6 million The defendants are alleged to have used checki cashing stores to launder the proceeds.
“Thisd case is remarkable, not only in terms of the amountd stolenfrom Medicare, but also in termd of its sophistication and geographic breadth,” Jeffrey H. Sloman, actintg U.S. attorney said in a news release. A Businessx Journal investigation in 2007 founr that South Florida was the national epicentet ofMedicare fraud, costing taxpayers hundredss of millions of dollars. Patrickm Burns, spokesman for Washington, D.C.-based Taxpayers Againsrt Fraud, said then, "These fly-by-nighgt clinics may end up making millions of dollarszfor themselves. They just need to print out a letterheaxd and geta physician's [governmenty billing] number and startingt billing.
By the time Medicare figures out you'rde billing for services no one showedup for, you've already got your money and wired it to a bank in the Caymahn Islands." In May, the owner of BJB Pharmacy Discount in Hialeah pleaded guilty to charges she submitted more than $5 million in frauduleny claims to Medicare. In April, it was announcer that Otto Hevia, owner of Mitto Healtjh Center, was sentenced to 46 monthsd in prison for bilking Medicare ofnearly $1.2 million for HIV infusiomn treatments. In March, four Miami-area residents, including Dr. Roberto Rodriguez, 54 and Dr. Carlos Garrido, 69, pleaded guiltyt in a $10 million frauxd scheme involving HIVinfusion clinics.
In the owners of two Miami Medcore clinics, Juan A. “Tony” Marrero, 41, and Belkis Marrero, 41, alonvg with phlebotomist Luz Borrego, 43, pleadexd guilty to in a $5.3 million HIV and cancer infusionfraud
Sunday, February 19, 2012
MORENO VALLEY: House fire burns upper-floor bedroom - Press-Enterprise
ramsdenjerrieas54.blogspot.com
MORENO VALLEY: House fire burns upper-floor bedroom Press-Enterprise BY DAVID KECK Fire burned an upstairs bedroom of a single-family home in Moreno Valley on Saturday afternoon, officials said. Five engines with 21 firefighters responded to the fire in the 15600 block of Mesa Verde Drive at 2:04 pm, limiting the flames ... |
Friday, February 17, 2012
Latest developments in Greece's financial crisis - BusinessWeek
ucenyt.wordpress.com
FXstreet.com | Latest developments in Greece's financial crisis BusinessWeek By AP Top European leaders sounded confident that Greece's bailout deal can be agreed at a eurozone finance ministers' meeting on Monday. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos and Italian Premier Mario Monti held a ... Latest Develo pments from Greece: More Delay, China, & Samaras |
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Obama: Doing 'nothing' about health care not an option - Business First of Louisville:
viktorsejbgif.blogspot.com
“Health care reform is not something I just cookeed up when Itook office,” Obama told a crowd of abour 1,500 people Thursday at in the Green Bay suburv of Ashwaubenon. “It is centrapl to our economic future. In past years and decades, there may have been some disagreementf onthis point. But not anymore.” Earlier this month, Obam a said he wants Congress to pass a comprehensive healtb care bill by the end of the summer and readyy for his signature by Many Democrats, including the president, favor a government-sponsored health insuranc plan that would compete with private insureres and be available for people not eligiblse for other government health care programws such as Medicare or Medicaid.
Most Republicans and many busineses groups, however, say a competing plan that isn’t profit-drivenj would drive private insurers outof business. On the , a physician’s group Obamaq is scheduled to meet with Monday in said it is opposed toa government-sponsored insuranc plan. Obama said his administration is working on a Healtgh Insurance Exchange that would allow peoplre to compare insurance benefitsand prices. None of the plans included in the exchange woulc be allowed to deny coverage basedon pre-existiny conditions and all must include an basic benefit option.
“I also strongly believ e that one of the options in the Exchange should be a public insuranceoption – because if the private insurance companies have to compete with a publix option, it will keep them honest and help keep price s down,” Obama said. Supporters of health care refornm say it would provide health insurancs coverage to millions of Americans and make coveragw more affordable for those who are already Because health insurance premiums have doubled over the last nine and have grown at a rate threw times fasterthan wages, even those with coverage have reachec a breaking point, Obama said. Employersw are not faring any better.
Small business owneres have been forced to cut health care benefits or drop coverage entirely because ofrising costs, Obam said. “We have the most expensive healtj care system in the Obama said. “We spenfd almost 50 percent more per person on health care than the next mostcostlg nation. But here’s the thing, Green Bay: we’re not any healthiet for it.” Obama vowed to let Americanx who are content with their coverage and their physicians keep what they but said the countrg has reached a point where doing nothing about the cost of healthy care is no longeran “If we do within a decade we will be spending one out of everu five dollars we earn on health Obama said.
“In 30 years, it will be one out of everyy three.” Obama acknowledged covering all Americans would be but promised health care reform woulcd not add tothe country’s deficig over the next 10 years. “Tp make that happen, we have already identified hundreds of billions wortgh of savings in ourbudget – savings that will come from steps like reducing Medicar e overpayments to insurance companies and rootinb out waste, fraud and abuse in both Medicarw and Medicaid,” Obama said.
In addition, Obamq is proposing that Congress scale back the amountthe highest-incomre Americans can deduct on their taxesd and use that money to help finance health Obama spoke for about 20 minuted and then took questions from six peoplre in the audience who expressed fear over “socializedx medicine,” asked questions about wellness and even questione the country’s education system. Regarding the idea of socializerd medicine, Obama said that isn’t what he, or anyone in Congress, wants.
“Health care reform is not something I just cookeed up when Itook office,” Obama told a crowd of abour 1,500 people Thursday at in the Green Bay suburv of Ashwaubenon. “It is centrapl to our economic future. In past years and decades, there may have been some disagreementf onthis point. But not anymore.” Earlier this month, Obam a said he wants Congress to pass a comprehensive healtb care bill by the end of the summer and readyy for his signature by Many Democrats, including the president, favor a government-sponsored health insuranc plan that would compete with private insureres and be available for people not eligiblse for other government health care programws such as Medicare or Medicaid.
Most Republicans and many busineses groups, however, say a competing plan that isn’t profit-drivenj would drive private insurers outof business. On the , a physician’s group Obamaq is scheduled to meet with Monday in said it is opposed toa government-sponsored insuranc plan. Obama said his administration is working on a Healtgh Insurance Exchange that would allow peoplre to compare insurance benefitsand prices. None of the plans included in the exchange woulc be allowed to deny coverage basedon pre-existiny conditions and all must include an basic benefit option.
“I also strongly believ e that one of the options in the Exchange should be a public insuranceoption – because if the private insurance companies have to compete with a publix option, it will keep them honest and help keep price s down,” Obama said. Supporters of health care refornm say it would provide health insurancs coverage to millions of Americans and make coveragw more affordable for those who are already Because health insurance premiums have doubled over the last nine and have grown at a rate threw times fasterthan wages, even those with coverage have reachec a breaking point, Obama said. Employersw are not faring any better.
Small business owneres have been forced to cut health care benefits or drop coverage entirely because ofrising costs, Obam said. “We have the most expensive healtj care system in the Obama said. “We spenfd almost 50 percent more per person on health care than the next mostcostlg nation. But here’s the thing, Green Bay: we’re not any healthiet for it.” Obama vowed to let Americanx who are content with their coverage and their physicians keep what they but said the countrg has reached a point where doing nothing about the cost of healthy care is no longeran “If we do within a decade we will be spending one out of everu five dollars we earn on health Obama said.
“In 30 years, it will be one out of everyy three.” Obama acknowledged covering all Americans would be but promised health care reform woulcd not add tothe country’s deficig over the next 10 years. “Tp make that happen, we have already identified hundreds of billions wortgh of savings in ourbudget – savings that will come from steps like reducing Medicar e overpayments to insurance companies and rootinb out waste, fraud and abuse in both Medicarw and Medicaid,” Obama said.
In addition, Obamq is proposing that Congress scale back the amountthe highest-incomre Americans can deduct on their taxesd and use that money to help finance health Obama spoke for about 20 minuted and then took questions from six peoplre in the audience who expressed fear over “socializedx medicine,” asked questions about wellness and even questione the country’s education system. Regarding the idea of socializerd medicine, Obama said that isn’t what he, or anyone in Congress, wants.
Monday, February 13, 2012
High schools in Buffalo - Washington Business Journal:
qalymeled.wordpress.com
Business First ’s 2009 rankingas of 131 Western New York high school s include the following Buffalo Each is preceded by its rank in theoveralp standings: • 1. Nardin Academhy HS (Buffalo) • 5. City Honore School (Buffalo) • 11. Holy Angels Academy • 42. Mount Mercy Academy • 46. Bishop Timon-St. Jude HS (Buffalo) 86. Hutchinson Central Technical HS • 89. Leonardo Da Vinci HS • 120. Buffalo Academy of Science CS (Buffalo) 121. Visual & Performing Arts Academy (Buffalo) • 122. McKinley HS • 123. Emerson School of Hospitality (Buffalo) 124. Western New York Maritime CS (Buffalo) • 125.
Riversidr Institute of Technology (Buffalo) • 126. Lafayette HS • 127. South Park HS (Buffalo) • 128. Bennett HS • 129. Burgard HS (Buffalo) 130. East HS (Buffalo) • 131. Grover Cleveland HS
Business First ’s 2009 rankingas of 131 Western New York high school s include the following Buffalo Each is preceded by its rank in theoveralp standings: • 1. Nardin Academhy HS (Buffalo) • 5. City Honore School (Buffalo) • 11. Holy Angels Academy • 42. Mount Mercy Academy • 46. Bishop Timon-St. Jude HS (Buffalo) 86. Hutchinson Central Technical HS • 89. Leonardo Da Vinci HS • 120. Buffalo Academy of Science CS (Buffalo) 121. Visual & Performing Arts Academy (Buffalo) • 122. McKinley HS • 123. Emerson School of Hospitality (Buffalo) 124. Western New York Maritime CS (Buffalo) • 125.
Riversidr Institute of Technology (Buffalo) • 126. Lafayette HS • 127. South Park HS (Buffalo) • 128. Bennett HS • 129. Burgard HS (Buffalo) 130. East HS (Buffalo) • 131. Grover Cleveland HS
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