New year is a blithe day that marks the advantageous alpha of a alpha year. The Alpha Year, according to Gregorian agenda avalanche on the 1st day of January every year. Alpha Year 2012 is acclaimed with lots of enthusiasm, ability and merrymaking. This year it is accustomed to be acclaimed with the aforementioned spirits. The Alpha year celebrations is not bound to any class, accumulation or sections of people. Bodies all over the World admire this appropriate day by dancing, dining, and frolicking. Flood of bodies accumulate in every corners of the alley on 31st December and delay patiently till the wee hours of 1st January morning.
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Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Help Your Children Develop Number Skills
We all use cardinal abilities through the advance of every day. It is absurd not to, whether it's ciphering the
time it will booty to get to places, alive out money change, or laying the table for the appropriate cardinal of people. In an more abstruse age it is the courage of abounding of the agency we accomplish in today's society. Everywhere we attending we see numbers in action. We can apprehension shape, the alignment of amplitude and altitude all about us. Mathematics provides logic, anatomy and adjustment to the cosmos and underpins all accurate theory. In adjustment to body and accomplish things, we accept to be able to appraisal and admeasurement up materials. We, also, accept to be able to adjustment them in the appropriate quantities, and so on.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Kurdish government, ExxonMobil ink oil search deal
SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq (AP) — The Kurdish regional government has signed a deal
with ExxonMobil to explore oil fields in northern Iraq, Kurdish officials said
Sunday, putting them in sharp conflict with Iraq's national government.
The government in Baghdad wants to control all energy contracts signed in
Iraq. With the deal, ExxonMobil becomes the first oil major to do business in
the Kurdish region in defiance of the central government's wishes.
The deal was announced Sunday by Kurdish officials at an oil and gas
conference in Irbil in comments carried on Kurdish television. Details of the
deal were published on Friday by the Financial Times newspaper.
The Kurdistan Regional Government has clashed with Baghdad over who has the
right to sign deals with international oil companies to develop Iraq's vast
energy resources.
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ExxonMobil
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search
Obama caps summit diplomacy in Hawaiian home state
KAPOLEI, Hawaii (AP) — President Barack Obama on Sunday tied the hopes of a
faster American economic recovery to the booming Pacific Rim region, saying
"we're not going to be able to put our folks back to work" unless the
Asia-Pacific region is successful as an engine for the world.
"We consider it a top priority," Obama said of the region where his
administration is pouring in time and political capital to expand exports and
business ties.
The president spoke as he dove into a day of summit diplomacy, proudly using
his home state of Hawaii as the American foothold to the Pacific. The meeting
brought together leaders of 21 nations of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
forum, whose members span from Chile to China and account for roughly half the
world's trade and economic output.
In the midst of a tough re-election bid, Obama kept his message on jobs, even
as he privately lobbied for help on containing the Iranian nuclear threat.
He was to cap the summit with a solo news conference in which topics on and
off his scripted agenda were likely to emerge.
Born in Hawaii, Obama reveled in having the world stage on his home turf,
while back east the Republicans seeking to oust him from the White House
assailed his foreign policy record.
Obama used his moment to signal to business executives and Asian leaders that
the United States has shifted from a post-Sept. 11 war focus to re-engagement
all across the Pacific.
"We represent close to 3 billion people, from different continents and
cultures," Obama told his APEC partners on Saturday, ahead of some Hawaiian luau
entertainment. "Our citizens have sent us here with a common task: to bring our
economies closer together, to cooperate, to create jobs and prosperity that our
people deserve so that they can provide for their families."
Dubai speed machine defies slowdown
DUBAI (Reuters) - Boeing savoured an order worth at least $18 billion
for 50 wide-body 777 jetliners from host airline Emirates as the Dubai Air Show
entered a second day beating the drum for growth despite widespread economic
gloom.
The largest single order by value in Boeing's history boosted the Middle
East's largest industry event and pushed talk of global recession to the
sidelines -- though analysts said getting aircraft financing was proving an
increasing challenge.
Qatar Airways looked set to step in with a possible Boeing order on Monday
and was expected to give its final verdict on a long-awaited Airbus order that
sources said would include A380 superjumbos on Tuesday, but talks appeared to be
continuing.
Sources familiar with the matter said Abu Dhabi's Etihad Airways was ready to
buy an extra 12 Boeings including 10 787 Dreamliners and two more 777s, but may
not announce at the show.
The Gulf's big three are buying wide-body aircraft to serve Asia and the
United States and redraw the world's transport and logistics map with the Gulf
at the center, thanks to its ability to reach most of the world's population in
one long-haul hop.
Kuwaiti lessor Alafco plans to boost an order for 30 Airbus A320neo passenger
aircraft, probably on Monday.
Economist Monti to quickly form new Italian govt
ROME (AP) — Economist Mario Monti accepted the monumental task Sunday of
trying to form a new government that can rescue Italy from financial ruin,
expressing confidence that the nation can beat the crisis if its people pull
together.
His selection came a day after Silvio Berlusconi reluctantly resigned as
premier, bowing out after world markets pummeled Italy's borrowing ability,
reflecting a loss of faith in the 75-year-old media mogul's leadership.
Berlusconi quit after the Italian parliament approved new reform measures
demanded by the European Union and central bank officials — but even those are
not considered enough to right Italy's ailing economy.
"There is an emergency, but we can overcome it with a common effort," Monti
told the nation, shortly after Italy's president formally asked him to see if he
can muster enough political support to lead the country out of one of its most
trying hours since World War II.
'Super Mario' tapped to cure Italy's economic ills
MILAN (AP) — The man tapped to be Italy's next premier earned the moniker
"Super Mario" in the halls of the European Commission, stopping such corporate
giants as Jack Welch and Bill Gates in their competitive tracks.
Elegantly attired with a formal demeanor, Mario Monti proved his mettle as a
tough negotiator when he blocked the merger of General Electric and Honeywell
and levied a euro500 million fine against Microsoft for abusing its dominant
position.
"He moves with caution and speaks with nuances. But he moves," said Carlo
Guarnieri, a political scientist at the University of Bologna.
A leading economist, Monti is among the most respected men in the country and
the most admired Italians
in Europe.
That will be no guarantee for success in the Herculean task before him:
building a majority large enough to push painful structural reforms through a
fractured Parliament to prevent Italy from being dragged into the burgeoning
debt crisis.
Reading the North
By Katie Mangelsdorf (Publication Consultants, $19.95)
The blurb: This biography tells the story of Joe
Redington and how he would go on to become the "Father of the Iditarod."
Excerpt: "The Redingtons now had their first Alaska
winter under their belt. Spring was poking its nose around the corner and Joe
had made a decision. Time to build a new cabin. This new cabin would have only
one stove to stoke this time. And no running water. The first batch of
mosquitoes made its grand and noisy entrance. Though their bite was weak, their
size foretold the next wave of vicious and voracious mosquitoes. What the second
wave lost in size, they sure made up in numbers. But as most Alaskans do, the
Redingtons learned to overlook those noisome insects and tune in only to the
work at hand. Joe learned that 'if you don't make a fuss at them, they won't
make a fuss at you.'
"Vi added with a smile, 'When people fuss about mosquitoes now, I just
kinda laugh.'
"Joe had a house to build."
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