Former President Donald Trump disputed claims he's considering BlackRock CEO Larry Fink or J.P. Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon to lead the Treasury Department if he's elected to another term -- despite telling Bloomberg last month Dimon was an option.
@#3
Wow, my search engine of choice turned up stuff...
Donald Trump Reminds Me of Bernie Madoff, Tom Vilsack Says (2016)
www.nbcnews.com
... In an exclusive interview with NBC News in the town where he began his political career, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack delivered a strong condemnation of presumptive Republican presidential nominee.
"Donald Trump is sort of to politics what Bernie Madoff was to investment," Vilsack said Saturday afternoon. "He is selling something that people don't fully understand and appreciate what it actually means." ...
@#8
Wow, thx.
That expansion of the acronym wasn't even in the search results I saw.
Commercial Bank of Kenya
Citizens Bank of Kansas
Craft Bar & Kitchen
gunlakecasino.com
... Take your tastes to new places. Grab the crew and kick things off with your favorite draft beers from our self-serve beer wall. Plus, enjoy craft cocktails and shareable appetizers before digging into our uniquely delicious entres. ...
Mondays in July
Burger Flight Feature
Join us every Monday in July at CBK for our Burger Flight feature priced at just $7.77. Hurry in while supplies last! Please note, this offer is limited and cannot be combined with any other specials or discounts. ...
From the About page
Our Story
The Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of Pottawatomi Indians (Gun Lake Tribe) is part of the historic Three Fires Confederacy, an alliance of the Pottawatomi (Bodewadmi), Ottawa (Odawa) and Chippewa (Ojibwe). Tribal Nations in the Great Lakes region are also known as the Neshnibek, or original people.
Under the command of Chief Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish, the Three Fires Confederacy signed the Treaty of Greenville in 1795 with the United States government. At the turn of the 19th century, the Chief's Band inhabited the Kalamazoo River valley, with the primary village located at the head of the river's head.
In 1821, Chief Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish signed the Treaty of Chicago, the first land cession to the U.S. government that directly affected his Band. Under the treaty's terms, the Tribe retained a three-square-mile reservation located at present-day downtown Kalamazoo.
The U.S. and Pottawatomi Tribes signed the Treaty of St. Joseph in 1827, ceding the tribes' rights to the Kalamazoo reserve. Neither payment nor land was ever provided to the Chief's Band, leading to a period of constant northern movement in an effort to avoid removal to the west. The Band briefly settled in Cooper, Plainwell and Martin before permanently settling in Bradley, near Gun Lake, circa 1838. ...
Whoa, cool stuff.
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