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Keywords: Palin, Weigeshoff, Kamangar, Google, LA Marathon, Kuleiman, Toronto

Maple Leafs, 2003, David Letterman, . Nikolai Zherdev, Vesa Toskala, Office of National
Statistics, Immigration, British, USA, Ford, Mazda, Mazda3, Honda, Honda Civic, Toyota,
NHL, NFL, Carguide, IndexTestForGoogle, XYZ12345ABC, ABC12345

This document contains text that was found over the internet. I am using the text as a
test of google indexing.

Isaac Asimov once said, "It has been my philosophy on life that difficulties vanish when
faced boldly." Difficulties have tested my commitment. In September 1992, at the
beginning of the running season I developed a severe case of mono. My doctors advised
me to drop out of school for a semester and not run for at least four months. Though
devastated, I refused to give up. I managed to keep up with all my classes, even when I
came down with pneumonia on top of mono in early November. I resumed training in the
beginning of December, two months earlier than doctors originally thought possible.
Today I am preparing for the LA Marathon in May.

Today that primitive hospital is just a memory for Weigeshoff, 26, now a staff nurse.
Although she still uses paper on occasion, her primary tool since 2003 has been a
laptop-on-a-stick, a PC that rolls around on what looks like an IV stand. As she greets
patients at the start of each shift, she logs in to their electronic records through a
wireless connection. She reviews vital signs -- temperature, heart rate -- which had been
tapped into the computer by a nurse's aide earlier. Then she clicks over to the
medication orders, making a note of each dose on the computer after she delivers it.
"Charting is more accurate now," she says, "because we're right there, doing everything
in real time." Best of all, she has shaved an hour of overtime off her day.

Some entry-level employees get all the breaks. Others make their own luck. Salar
Kamangar did both. He joined Google Inc. (GOOG ) after graduating from Stanford
University in 1999, five years before the initial public offering, and his meteoric rise
mirrored the company's own comet-like trajectory. In seven years, Kamangar, now 29,
has gone from newbie to key player in one of the most remarkable corporate success
stories of the decade. Among his accomplishments: writing the first business plan,
becoming a founding member of the Google product team, and leading the engineering
team that launched AdWords, Google's proprietary method for tailoring Web ads to
search terms. Google's youngest vice-president talked with BusinessWeek's John
DeBruicker about what makes Google one of the best places for entry-level employees

Anyone who was thinking the other night that they might scoop up
www.joetheplumber.com to capitalize on the notoriety of the Ohio plumber who starred
in the debate....too bad. It's already taken. The real Joe The Plumber is Joe Francis of
Amarillo, Texas, who registered the domain in 2007. According to office manager Ronnie
Bishop, the ten-person business hadn't racked up one hit for about three months. Then,
the night of the debate, it spiked to 32,000. Yesterday, it was at 320,000. Bishop says the
company is getting a lot of requests for tee-shirts. "Do you sell tee shirts?" I asked. "We
do now," says Bishop. Best of all....offers rolling in for the domain name. One bloke has
offered $800,000, according to Bishop. Francis has 1,000 tee shirts on order, just like the
ones he and his plumbers wear when they go out on a call. Now, that's what I call
politicians stimulating job growth. Who are they voting for. "I'm for Obama, but I'm
pretty sure Joe is for McCain."

NEW YORK–Anyone can do Sarah Palin's voice, says comedian Tina Fey, who has done
a pretty good job of it herself. "Not since 'Sling Blade' has there been a voice that
anybody can do," Fey said. "Anybody can take a swing at this voice.'' Appearing on CBS'
"Late Show with David Letterman" Friday, Fey shared her formula for having spoofed
the Alaska governor in recent "Saturday Night Live" sketches. "It's a little bit 'Fargo,' it's
a little bit Reese Witherspoon in 'Election,'" said Fey, adding she also borrowed the
Midwestern accent of her friend Paula's grandma, "a sweet, sweet old lady from Joliet,
Ill. She would always say, 'Ohhhh, this and that and stuff like that!''' Fey, the star of the
NBC comedy "30 Rock," was formerly a writer and cast member at "SNL," where she
has made a splash with guest appearances this fall making sport of her resemblance to the
Republican vice presidential hopeful. She explained to Letterman other ways she captures
Palin's distinctive speaking style: dropping g's and loading sentences with r's.'' "She's
digging those r's," Fey said. "I think she thinks there's oil in those r's – she is digging
deep!'' As spoof made way for reality, Gov. Palin was scheduled to appear on "SNL"
Saturday. There was no word on whether Fey would be on hand.

The Leafs lost their second straight shootout – they've never been very good at this
tiebreak procedure, with a 10-21 all-time mark – and wasted a 32-save effort by Vesa
Toskala in falling 1-0 to the New York Rangers. Stajan – the best Leaf not named Toskala
last night – had been benched in that shootout loss to St. Louis on Monday. With Ryan
Hollweg again suspended, Stajan started last night on the fourth line. But he impressed
Leaf coach Ron Wilson enough to kill penalties, take power-play time and ultimately end
up on the top unit with Nik Antropov and Jason Blake. The game was scoreless after
overtime, the first time the Leafs have been involved in one of those since Nov. 4, 2000.
Nikolai Zherdev beat Toskala on the Rangers' first attempt and Stajan was the first Leaf
to try to score on Steve Valiquette. The shot went into Valiquette's pads. "I sat him out. It
was a clear message: Get your butt going," said Wilson. "You see what he's made of. He
had some great shifts, made some great plays and it would have been nice if he would
have chipped in with a goal on the shootout, but that's the way it goes." Toskala made a
nice pad save on Nigel Dawes, then Nikolai Kulemin made a great deke on Valiquette to
tie the shootout. Kulemin, a rookie, was also the only Leaf to score in the shootout
against St. Louis, giving Wilson an idea of how he might approach them in the future.
"We found a guy in Kulemin," said Wilson. "Maybe I should have all rookies take it.
They seem to catch on pretty quick around here. I'm going to lean more on younger guys
around here in shootouts because they go out there fearless." Fredrik Sjostrom scored on
the Rangers' third attempt, and when Jason Blake failed to tie the score with the final
shot, the Rangers went off victorious as the Leafs were vexed yet again by the shootout.
"You've got to get that extra point," said Stajan. "The end of the year, it's so tight, the
difference is that extra point in the shootout. We've got to bear down and find a way. I
don't know what it is. We have the talent to score in shootouts, we're just not getting the
job done." If not for Toskala, though, Toronto would not have garnered that point. For a
period and a half, the Leafs played the kind of thoroughly boring road game – the heavy
forechecking, the tight defence – that Wilson wants them to employ. "I guess we have to
be happy with the one point, given how we played in the third," said Toskala. "The first
and second, that was new Leafs style, what we want to play, what we're going to play.
But we haven't been able to put it together for a full 60 minutes." The Leafs ran into
penalty trouble – they took eight minors to the Rangers' four in regulation – and were
heavily outshot.If there was a subtext to the game, it was Wilson's reliance on his young
players. Combine that with the benching of Stajan earlier this week and that of Carlo
Colaiacovo last night, and there's a strong message being sent to the team's veterans.
"(The young guys) were blocking shots, giving their body up to bail guys out who took
stupid penalties," said Wilson. "We spent the last couple of days focusing on our penalty
killing. We changed some of our personnel on the back end. You saw (Luke) Schenn and
(Jonas) Frogren doing a lot of penalty killing over some veteran guys who haven't bought
into the system yet. "If they want ice time, they've got to do it the right way.

LONDON–The British government says it will cut the number of immigrants allowed to
enter Britain to guard against racial tensions amid rising unemployment. Immigration
Minister Phil Woolas says Britain needs a tougher immigration policy that makes sure
there are enough jobs for British citizens with the economic downturn. His remarks were
published in the Times of London on Saturday. Britain adopted a points-based system in
February to ensure that only skilled foreigners needed by the British economy are
admitted to the country. But Woolas says the government should focus on training British
citizens to fill those jobs. He also said the government will not allow immigration to push
Britain's population above 70 million. The Office of National Statistics said Britain
currently has a population of just under 61 million.

A fully refreshed version of the Mazda3 sedan is set to launch at next month's Los
Angeles auto show, at a time when high fuel prices and a shaky global economy mean
small cars have never been more valuable. In other words, the new 3 is an important
model for Mazda, which is already battling with compact rivals Honda Civic and
Toyota Corolla for top spot on the Canadian new-car sales charts. The Ford-owned
automaker says that since its launch in 2003, the current 3 sedan and five-door hatchback
have sold around 1.8 million vehicles in more than 100 countries, accounting for almost
one in three Mazdas sold every year. We'll have to wait for the five-door and the
inevitable Mazdaspeed performance models, but Mazda tells us that the new 3 sedan will
get a refreshed interior, exterior styling and a 2.5-litre four-cylinder engine to replace the
outgoing 2.3 L unit. No word on a release date here. There are no diesels or gasoline-
electric hybrids planned, but you can expect some weight reduction of between 45-90
kilograms compared to the current car. Expect a more refined sporty ride, improved fuel
economy and a quieter cabin than the outgoing 3.

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