tosp Pot professorship established at University of Denver

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tosp Pot professorship established at University of Denver

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Washington mdash; Senator Kamala Harris is significantly curtailing and reshaping her presidential campaign in a bid to cut costs and boost her standing ahead of the first-in-the-nation state of Iowa.A memo sent Wednesday to campaign staffers and top donors and obtained by CBS News outlines plans to slash salaries, reduce staff size at the campaign s national headquarters in Baltimore and in some early states and redouble Harris plan to campaign in Iowa.Harris has raised about $35 million to date from more than 350,000 donors, according to the memo. But she remains mired in the middle of the pack in early-state and national polls that usually show her trailing Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, former Vice President Joe Biden and South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg. The kind of realignment outlined in the memo from campaign manager Juan Rodriguez is typical at this stage of the campaign, as th [url=https://www.stanleycups.it]stanley cup[/url] e fourth quarter begins and fina [url=https://www.stanley-quencher.us]stanley cup[/url] l decisions are being made on how to best deploy staff and purchase advertising time. Longtime political observers in Iowa and leaders of rival presidential campaigns have agreed in recent weeks that staffing decisions ahead of the Iowa caucus on February 3 must be in place by November 1 in order to succeed.As the memo states, Plenty of winning primary campaigns, like John Kerry s in 2004 and John McCain s in 2008, have had to make tough choices on their way to the nomina [url=https://www.stanleymug.us]stanley cup[/url] tion, and this is no differ Mpsu Antonio Brown accused of rape in federal lawsuit
A CBS News investigation reveals that a federal fund intended to protect flood victims often benefits private insurance companies instead. The National Flood Insurance Program, run by FEMA, is $25 billion in debt. In some years, up to two-thirds of the money that s supposed to help flood victims goes to private insurance companies and the attorneys they hire to fight flood claims.When record floods hit Louisiana in 2016, 150,000 people had damage to thei [url=https://www.adidas-yeezys.com.mx]yeezy[/url] r homes with an estimated cost of $15 billion. Two years later, many homeowners are still struggling to rebuild ndash; and fighting the same companies and lawyers that they fund with their premiums and taxpayer dollars, reports CBS Evening News anchor Jeff Glor.Ricky Wall and Melissa Miles were trapped in their home for three days when flooding hit Louisiana in 2016. It was coming so fast, it was white-capping over the roads, Wall recalled. Covered in sewer water, they t [url=https://www.airforceone.fr]af1[/url] hought things couldn t get worse. [url=https://www.adidas-originals.es]adidas originals[/url] Their home was ruined, but they had a flood insurance policy, that they were required to buy, worth $176,000. The insurance company was a nightmare, Wall said. It was-- Almost as bad as the flood, Miles added. I about had a stroke fighting with them people every day, Wall said. Flooding at the home of Ricky Wall and Melissa Miles When insurance didn t pay enough to fix their home, they had to come up with the cash themselves to do it.