Excerpts: Biden Attacks Romneyâs âRhetoricâ Wall Street Journal Blogs Thu, 26 Apr 2012 09:14 AM PDT We'll have a full report in a bit, but here are excerpts from Vice President Joe Biden's speech in New York this morning, as provided by the Obama campaign. | Ellen Degeneres Needs A Marshmallow Cannon from Joey Hudy Forbes Thu, 26 Apr 2012 09:10 AM PDT If there is ever a national maker-in-training program for young people, Joe Hudy would be a good choice for chief evangelist. The young man who recently taught President Obama how to fire his DIY marshmallow air cannon, at the White House Science Fair, is an inspirational force of nature for makers. | Did Secret Service agents hire prostitutes in El Salvador too? The Christian Science Monitor Thu, 26 Apr 2012 09:10 AM PDT An investigative reporter says Secret Service agents went to a strip club and hired prostitutes in El Salvador last year, prior to a visit by President Obama. The Secret Service is investigating the accuracy of the report. | SBA Says: âS. Dakota, Tell Us Your Storyâ Yankton Press & Dakotan Thu, 26 Apr 2012 09:08 AM PDT WASHINGTON â" Do you have a small business story to tell? Every business has one. Tell your story to the SBA and your video may appear at National Small Business Week, SBAâs marquee event that attracts hundreds of small business owners, Fortune 500 company executives, Members of Congress and Obama Administration officials. | Biden Probably Won't Be Mentioning Obama's 'Big Stick' Again The Atlantic Wire via Yahoo! News Thu, 26 Apr 2012 09:08 AM PDT "I promise you, the president has a big stick. I promise you," said Joe Biden in New York today in a speech that was supposed to hit back at Mitt Romney's foreign policy plans. Cue Twitter giggles at the vice president's Teddy Roosevelt reference that, per every kid in Junior High history class ever, might have some naughty double entendre. Every bad Twitter joke you can imagine ensued. We can ... | House moves ahead with cybersecurity bill Los Angeles Daily News Thu, 26 Apr 2012 09:08 AM PDT WASHINGTON - House Republicans are pushing ahead with legislation to protect the nation's critical infrastructure and corporations from electronic attacks despite Obama administration objections that the legislation fails to protect Americans' civil liberties. | | |
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