Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Oil prices fell on Friday

High-Risk Warning? Forex, Futures, and Options trading has large potential rewards, but also large potential risks.? The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you.? You must be aware of the risks of investing in forex, futures, and options and be willing to accept them in order to trade in these markets.? Forex trading involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors.? Please do not trade with borrowed money or money you cannot afford to lose.? This website is neither a solicitation nor an offer to Buy or Sell currencies, futures, or options.? No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those discussed on this website.? Any opinions, news, research, analysis, prices, or other information contained on this website is provided as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice.? Website owners and affiliates will not accept liability for any loss or damage, including without limitation to, any loss of profit, which may arise directly or indirectly from the use of or reliance on such information.? Please remember that the past performance of any trading system or methodology is not necessarily indicative of future results.

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[OOC] The Queen

I have interest but also a few questions.

Has the demon any power because he is described as a powerful being but there is no information about if he has powers or ability's.
I really don't like to add a picture as I can't find a picture looking like my character and I also dislike Anime so could I instead give a description?
Why would the Demon still follow the queen as she can't give him any more to eat?
Does the age limit also count for him?

I want to play the demon as I like to play evil beings can get up a character pretty fast after you answer.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/RuFvoJT73qc/viewtopic.php

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Beatriz strengthens to hurricane, aims for Mexico

MIAMI ? The National Weather Service says Tropical Storm Beatriz has reached hurricane strength, as its heavy rains and strong winds have begun pounding resort beaches on Mexico?s Pacific coast.

Authorities closed the popular tourist ports of Acapulco and Manzanillo ahead of the hurricane?s arrival.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center said Beatriz had sustained winds of about 75 miles per hour (121 kph) and is expected to brush over Mexico?s southwestern coast before heading back out to sea.

Beatriz is located about 85 miles (140 kms) southeast of Manzanillo and moving northwest at 12 mph (19 kph).

? Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/bostonherald/news/~3/BjAZe3Jgs-k/view.bg

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After King: Memphis sanitation workers face crunch (AP)

MEMPHIS, Tenn. ? Decades after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated while in Memphis to support striking sanitation workers, the people who keep the city clean are again fighting for their jobs. Memphis is considering privatizing its waste services, which would eliminate about 250 jobs.

The dispute in Tennessee comes as some state governments around the nation are pressing to weaken unions by stripping them of the kind of collective bargaining rights for public employees that King and other leaders fought for. The issue has led to vows of union rallies at city meetings and even prompted a threat of violence ? posted on Twitter ? against a city council member who is leading the call for privatization.

Memphis' city council scheduled a Tuesday meeting to discuss its $60 million recurring budget deficit and one money-saving proposal calls for placing sanitation services, including garbage collection, into the hands of private companies.

"Clearly, Dr. King lost his life for people to have collective bargaining rights," said Shelley Seeberg, a local union administrator opposed to privatization. Yet she said Memphis has a unique niche in civil rights history because of the 1968 strike and insists the matter today is well worth fighting for.

The outsourcing plan, advanced by City Councilman Kemp Conrad, calls for modernizing an aging fleet of garbage trucks and taking other steps to collect $25 million in savings per year. A private company, under Conrad's plan, would be able to make 950 trash collection stops a day compared with 450 stops under the existing system.

But the plan also calls for cuts in the solid waste work force, about 500 employees who do not have pensions. Conrad's proposal says the private sanitation company would probably need about 250 employees, earning a similar wage but with longer hours.

Buyouts of up to $75,000 would be offered to the 107 sanitation workers who have served 35 years or more but do not want to try for a job with a private contractor or are ready to retire.

"This is probably the last year we're going to be able to afford something like that because of the dire straits we're in," Conrad said. Memphis' budget woes are similar to those of other cities, and the most recent proposal includes a fee for vehicle inspections and cuts in police overtime.

Protesters from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees are expected at Tuesday's council meeting. The proposal has encountered strong opposition from its Local 1733, the union King came to support in 1968.

Seeberg, the union administrator, said privatization means the city would ultimately lose control over the cost of its sanitation services. She and other opponents also claim the quality of service would drop under privatization.

Newer garbage trucks that could be used have automated collection arms that pick up garbage cans one at a time, reducing the need for multiple crew members on a truck. But opponents say privatized collectors would probably no longer pick up larger items that residents leave at curbside like junked furniture, appliances and tree limbs the city has been disposing of for free.

Workers say private firms might charge to pick up such bulky items.

Seeberg said the city never mentioned buyouts or layoffs when it met with the city's unions to negotiate contracts earlier this year, and it has not collectively bargained on this issue. She warned the city would be taking a step back to pre-1968 times if council members go along with Conrad's proposal.

"Sadly, we're back at that same place in time, where we're having discussions about whether or not people have a right to collectively bargain," Seeberg said. "This is clearly an attack on the working people."

As the discussion escalates, Memphis police are investigating a threatening Twitter message aimed at Conrad and has since increased patrols around his neighborhood.

For his part, Conrad said he understands the meaning of King's civil rights campaign.

"I fully understand and appreciate the movement and what happened in 1968 and what that meant for our country and our city," Conrad said. "That's one of the reasons why I want to do something good for these workers and offer the buyouts."

To longtime sanitation workers like 69-year-old Cleophus Smith, buyouts are no substitute for a regular paying job.

"I wouldn't want anyone to take a buyout plan and leave me hanging," said Smith, who was 24 and just one year into the job when he marched with King in 1968. "I'm here to fight this to the end."

Smith was one of 1,300 Memphis sanitation workers from 1968 inducted into the U.S. Department of Labor Hall of Fame earlier this month. He says he will only have Social Security benefits to live from if he loses his job and is asking the city and union to work something out.

King fought for the union and his presence helped secure better wages for the workers. Smith, who was 24 at the time, said King's persistent message of non-violent resistance resonated with a group of sanitation workers who ate rationed food and were getting maced and attacked by police dogs.

"It's an insult for privatization to come in after what the sanitation workers fought for in 1968," Smith said. "It's a dishonor."

The strike began in February 1968 after two sanitation workers were killed while working on a city garbage truck. The city workers were seeking the right to unionize. City officials declared the strike illegal and arrested scores of strikers and protesters over ensuing weeks. King first tried to lead a protest on March 28, 1968, but it was broken up by police and a 16-year-old was killed. Before King could follow through on his promise to lead a second, peaceful march in Memphis, he was killed by a sniper on April 4.

The strike ended April 16 when the city and union settled.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110621/ap_on_re_us/us_memphis_sanitation_workers

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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Michelle Obama arrives in South Africa with family (AFP)

PRETORIA (AFP) ? Michelle Obama arrived in Pretoria late Monday for what officials have billed as her first major solo overseas trip as US first lady, to South Africa and Botswana.

She arrived at Waterkloof Air Force Base in Pretoria at 9:15 pm (1915 GMT).

Obama was accompanied by her daughters, Malia and Sasha, and her mother, Marian Robinson -- but not her husband, US President Barack Obama -- for the trip focusing on young women leaders and the legacy of the anti-apartheid struggle.

The first lady, wearing a formal red and black jacket and black pants, was greeted by South African Correctional Services Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, US ambassador to South Africa Donald Gips, his wife Liz and three sons.

She was given a bouquet of flowers by three girls aged 10 and 11, and her daughters were each given a blanket emblazoned with the South African flag.

Obama waved to journalists before heading to two black cars waiting in front of the plane.

Gips told journalists: "We are very excited. ... This shows the respect we have for South Africa. She (Obama) is looking forward to the visit -- as South Africa is looking into hosting her."

Obama is scheduled to meet one of South African President Jacob Zuma's wives, Nompumelelo Ntuli-Zuma, in Pretoria on Tuesday morning before heading to Johannesburg for a visit to the Nelson Mandela Foundation, where she will get a tour from the former president's wife, Graca Machel.

On Tuesday afternoon, Obama will visit a daycare centre in Johannesburg and tour the Apartheid Museum, which chronicles the history of the struggle against white-minority rule.

The six-day trip will also take the first lady to Cape Town and the Botswanan capital Gaborone.

Obama has a packed schedule that includes a safari in Botswana, a visit with Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu in Cape Town and a trip to the memorial for Hector Pieterson -- a 12-year-old student killed during the anti-apartheid Soweto uprising in 1976.

She will also give the keynote address at a conference of the Young African Women Leaders Forum, a two-day meeting of 75 women aged 16 to 30 who are playing leadership roles across the continent.

The visit is Obama's second trip to sub-Saharan Africa, after a 24-hour stop in Ghana with her husband in 2009.

The US State Department described the visit as a mix of policy trip and personal pilgrimage.

"She's coming on this trip to talk about women's development and youth development, and South Africa's a leader in that, not only on the continent but globally," said Elizabeth Trudeau, spokeswoman at the US embassy in Pretoria.

The White House has emphasised the importance to the first family of South Africa's anti-apartheid movement, which President Obama has called his first political cause.

Trudeau said the White House considers this Obama's "first major overseas trip". Obama made her first solo trip as first lady last year, stopping briefly in Haiti before continuing on to Mexico for a three-day visit.

Relations between the United States and South Africa have suffered a number of diplomatic strains this year.

In March, South Africa allowed exiled Haitian ex-president Jean-Bertrand Aristide to return home, despite a personal appeal from President Obama to keep him in South Africa until after a presidential run-off election that Washington feared he would destabilise.

President Zuma has also lashed out at the NATO-led bombing campaign in Libya, which Washington supports.

Nomfundo Ngwenya, a political analyst at the South African Institute of International Affairs, said the visit is a way for the Obama administration to pay attention to South Africa even though the president is tied up at home with a struggling economy and looming elections.

"He's saying that South Africa is still important and also advancing his wife's interests, which includes women's advancement," Ngwenya told AFP.

But she said at some point President Obama will himself have to visit South Africa, the continent's largest economy.

"Michelle is not a head of state or a decision-maker," she said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110620/ts_alt_afp/ussafricafirstladydiplomacyarrival

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TTC Video - Greece and Rome: An Integrated History of the Ancient Mediterranean

eLearning - DVDRip | AVI | English | Run time: ~36x30 min | 6.14 GB
video: XVID | ~670 Kbps | 640x480 | audio: 128Kbps | 2 ch | 48 KHz | mp3
Lecture, History, Culture


? In the 1st century B.C., Rome's matchless armies consolidated control over the entire Mediterranean world, and Greece lay vanquished along with scores of other formerly independent lands?yet the Roman poet Horace saw something special in Greece when he wrote "Greece, the captive, made her savage victor captive." ?


In the 1st century B.C., Rome's matchless armies consolidated control over the entire Mediterranean world, and Greece lay vanquished along with scores of other formerly independent lands?yet the Roman poet Horace saw something special in Greece when he wrote "Greece, the captive, made her savage victor captive."
What did Horace mean by this paradoxical quote?
What did Greek culture symbolize to the militarily successful Romans?
How did the Greeks, in turn, view their Latin-speaking rulers?
How did these two independent branches of ancient civilization develop and then become inextricably entwined, with implications for all of subsequent Western culture?
The answers to these and other intriguing questions require an understanding not just of Rome but of Greece as well. Integrated approaches to teaching Greek and Roman history, however, are a rarity in academia. Most scholars are historians of either Greek or Roman history and perform research solely in that specific field, an approach that author and award-winning Professor Robert Garland considers questionable.
"It's only by studying the two cultures in connection with each other that we can come to an understanding of that unique cultural entity that is 'Greco-Roman,'" he notes.
Greece and Rome: An Integrated History of the Ancient Mediterranean is an impressive and rare opportunity to understand the two dominant cultures of the ancient Mediterranean world in relation to one another. Over the course of 36 lectures, Professor Garland explores the many ways in which these two very different cultures intersected, coincided, and at times collided.
Explore Greco-Roman Culture
The relationship between the Greeks and the Romans has virtually no parallel in world history. Greece and Rome's relationship resembled a marriage: two distinct personalities competing in some areas, sharing in others, and sometimes creating an entirely new synthesis of the two civilizations.
This synthesis created the extraordinary culture that we call Greco-Roman: a unique fusion of civilizations that encompasses statecraft, mythology, language, philosophy, fine arts, architecture, science, and much else. "The term suggests there was an unbreakable tie between the two cultures," says Professor Garland. "And indeed there was. What would Rome have been without the imprint of the Greeks, and what would we know about the Greeks were it not for the Romans?"
Professor Garland cites three critical reasons why an understanding of the Greco-Roman world is so important to us here in the 21st century:
The connections between the two civilizations remind us that culture is not created and owned by a single people, but is enriched through the contributions of others.
The relationship between the Greeks and Romans is somewhat analogous to the relationship between the British and the Americans.
An integrated study of the Greeks and Romans helps us understand how each profoundly influenced the other.
Follow Twin Historical Paths
Greece and Rome begins by asking who the Greeks and Romans were, what their images of themselves were, and how they organized their societies. From there, you explore their first historical interactions through trade and, inevitably, war, as Roman influence began to spread into the eastern Mediterranean.
The world of the Greeks that the Romans encountered during the 3rd to 1st centuries B.C. was the spectacular Hellenistic civilization created by the conquests of Alexander the Great. It was a unified Greek culture with stunning artistic and intellectual achievements that thoroughly captivated the Romans.
Roman political interactions with the Greeks, however, were another matter.
You follow the long series of wars in which the Romans at first preserved Greek independence and then, having grown impatient with Greek ingratitude, duplicity, and infighting, eventually resorted to the efficient brutality for which Rome's legions were renowned. In 30 B.C., with the death of Cleopatra, the last of the Ptolemaic Greek rulers, Rome had conquered not only every Greek land but the entire Mediterranean world.
A Rich Cultural Partnership
For the next half millennium, Greece and Rome were inseparable. "There's never been anything quite like it," Professor Garland says. "Greece and Rome are two cultures joined at the hip, arguably the most special and the most important cultural relationship in all of history."
Greece and Rome goes beyond the political and military stories and immerses you in the details of life in Classical antiquity. You investigate Greek and Roman approaches to human universals such as death, leisure, and sex. You also witness the emergence and development of an integrated Greco-Roman culture as reflected in religion, art, architecture, medicine, science, technology, literature, education, and philosophy.
For example:
Much of what we think of today as Classical Greek art is, in fact, copies commissioned by wealthy Roman connoisseurs.
Romans displayed a love-hate relationship with Greece, epitomized by the Roman politician Cato the Elder, who was deeply immersed in Greek culture but who publicly denounced its corrupting influence.
Educated Romans were predominantly bilingual, speaking also Greek.
The prolific writer Plutarch recognized the value of examining the Greeks and Romans alongside one another without prejudice and wrote a celebrated set of parallel biographies of famous Greeks and Romans.
Despite all their similarities, Greeks and Romans were different enough that each engaged in cultural stereotyping of the other, which amounted to latent nationalism. Throughout the lectures, you explore some of their more substantive cultural differences, including:
Religion: Greek religion was anthropomorphic, with deities displaying human form and manner. Early Romans did not believe in deities but rather in numina?divine powers that had precise functions but no physical identity.
Views of foreigners: Romans were far more diverse in origin than the Greeks, which made them more open to foreigners. This had profound effects, as the Romans used grants of citizenship as a political tool to cement and expand the Roman Empire.
Construction: The largest structures in the Greek world were theaters, some of which could hold 20,000 to 40,000 people. The Romans had a more grandiose concept of public space, as seen in the Circus Maximus, in which 250,000 spectators could assemble to watch a chariot race.
Thinking: The Greeks delighted in analyzing the world and asking questions about the nature of existence, the constitution of the ideal state, and the definition of virtue. For their part, the Romans, though they also studied philosophy, were content to run the world.
An Expert in the Classical World
Professor Garland has spent his entire career immersed in classical studies and in the worlds of ancient Greece and Rome.
His academic research focuses on the cultural, religious, social, and political histories of these two civilizations. He has written numerous books on subjects ranging from the politics of Athenian religion and disability in the Greco-Roman world to daily life in ancient Greece and the idea of celebrity in antiquity.
Delight in the wide variety of sources?literature, archaeology, the visual arts, coinage, inscriptions?that he draws upon in order to assemble a fascinating and complex picture of these two great civilizations. Value his mastery of detail on his subject, as he helps you to reach important conclusions from an analysis of the shared cultural features of Greece and Rome. And appreciate how Dr. Garland always keeps Greece and Rome focused on how this material affects us in the present day.
"I profoundly believe that Greece and Rome are inside us, both as destructive and as creative forces," he says. "They've taught us our ways of being a human being and of seeing the world. We are their heirs and their guardians, a heavy but invigorating challenge."

1. Who Were the Greeks? Who Were the Romans?
2. Trade and Travel in the Mediterranean
3. Democratic or Republican
4. Law and Order
5. Less than Fully Human
6. Close Encounters, 750?272 B.C.
7. The Velvet Glove, 272?190 B.C.
8. How the Two Polytheisms (Almost) Merged
9. The Iron Fist, 190?146 B.C.
10. The Last Hellenistic Dynasts, 146?31 B.C.
11. Why the Greeks Lost, Why the Romans Won
12. Philhellenism and Hellenophobia
13. The Two Languages
14. Leisure and Entertainment
15. Sex and Sexuality
16. Death and the Afterlife
17. From Mystery Religion to Ruler Cult
18. Greek Cities under Roman Rule
19. Greeks in Rome, Romans in Greece
20. The Hellenism of Augustus
21. Art, Looting, and Reproductions
22. Architecture, Sacred and Secular
23. Science and Technology
24. Disease, Medical Care, and Physicians
25. The Greek Epic and Its Roman Echo
26. Tragedy and Comedy
27. Love Poetry, Satire, History, the Novel
28. Greek Influences on Roman Education
29. Greek Philosophy and Its Roman Advocates
30. Hellenomania from Nero to Hadrian
31. Jews, Greeks, and Romans
32. Christianity's Debt to Greece and Rome
33. The Apotheosis of Athens
34. The Decline of the West
35. The Survival of the East
36. The Enduring Duo professor: Robert Garland
country: usa

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