Monday, August 5, 2013

carhartt warehouse (Hackney, London, by tossup)

Review of carhartt warehouse by tossup
User photo: tossup

Offensive content?

Review of carhartt warehouse from 3 August 2013

How can this warehouse be difficult to find?? It's just off of Mare Street.? One side of Ellingfort Road was completely flattened with bombs, and the county put up prefabs all along that side of Ellingfort Road.? I lived there with my mum, dad and sister from 1944 until 1956.? It was a great area to live in, so close to everything.

Give the first compliment

Discover cool new places both at home and abroad with the Qype community's trusted reviews!

Join now!

? Qype 2013 - Review of carhartt warehouse by tossup Made with Love in Hamburg, Germany

Source: http://www.qype.co.uk/review/3942836

rpi dst friends with kids pacific standard time northern mariana islands summer time coolio

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Jetblue's Cabin Redesign Is A Big Step Up . . . For Some People

Jetblue's Cabin Redesign Is A Big Step Up . . . For Some People

JetBlue has a new design scheme for their Airbus A321s, used on transcontinental flights. In addition to the usual 143 economy seats, these planes will have actual "class" seating for the first time with 16 business class seats and four business class "suites." Apparently Jetblue had to file a special request with the FAA for business class.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/BC8V-ZtdZVQ/jetblues-cabin-redesign-is-a-big-step-up-for-som-1023077089

Mexico vs Panama The Dirty Royal Baby Pictures Kensington Palace Carlos Danger geraldo rivera Carlos Hyde

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Dems hit GOP on immigration in top critic's home

AMES, Iowa - The Senate's second-ranking Democrat says House Republicans should support legal status for young people who were brought into the country illegally as minors.

Sen. Richard Durbin of Illinois made a strategic visit to Iowa Friday to highlight House GOP resistance to a Senate-passed immigration bill. The Senate measure would heighten border security and provide a pathway to citizenship for millions of immigrants living here illegally.

Durbin joined Iowa Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin at a forum in a college town represented in Congress by Republican Rep. Steve King.

King fiercely opposes a path to citizenship for immigrants now here illegally. Republican leaders denounced King's most incendiary remarks. But some Democrats paint him as a symbol of GOP resistance.

Harkin said Iowans are compassionate and don't use hateful language to characterize people.

Source: http://www.kvoa.com/news/dems-hit-gop-on-immigration-in-top-critic-s-home/

gucci mane Chicago sinkhole Panda Express illuminati illuminati ricin Google Fiber

Friday, August 2, 2013

'2 Guns' Or 'The Smurfs 2' This Weekend? We Help You Decide!

Denzel Washington and Mark Wahlberg are fighting their way out of an elaborate CIA scheme in 2 Guns, and Hank Azaria is once again hoping to take down the little blue guys in The Smurfs 2. These are the movies to check out -- will you be grabbing your popcorn and seeing one of them this weekend?

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/movie-reviews-what-see-weekend-2-guns-and-smurfs-2/1-a-543121?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Amovie-reviews-what-see-weekend-2-guns-and-smurfs-2-543121

Jonathan Winters Justin Bieber Anne Frank will ferrell coachella zack greinke zack greinke jackie robinson

Oil leaks into Daytona canal

Published: Thursday, August 1, 2013 at 9:53 p.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, August 1, 2013 at 10:56 p.m.

? After oil was discovered leaking into a canal west of Nova Road, officials determined the source was a hydraulic pump in a construction zone on Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University?s campus, an official said Thursday night.

Daytona Beach fire crews and the Volusia County Hazardous Materials team responded to the area of Museum and South Seneca boulevards when a ?steady flow of oil? was seen leaking into the canal adjacent to the intersection shortly after 7 p.m., Daytona fire spokesman Lt. Larry Stoney said in a release. The oil spill is not affecting any local water sources.

HazMat team members set up floatable booms to keep the oil from continuing into the canal system, Stoney said. No signs have contamination have been found in the interconnected canals.

? Katie Kustura

Source: http://www.news-journalonline.com/article/20130801/news/130809912

Steam Summer Sale 2013 Randy Travis in critical condition stacy keibler stacy keibler sf giants Ryan Davis Golden Corral

Fairy tale: Court ruling awards $3.3 billion to Indian princesses

A court ruling last week put to rest a decades-old legal battle involving scheming servants, disinherited princesses, and a forged will.

By Jeremy Ravinsky,?Correspondent / July 29, 2013

The Faridkot estate is seen in New Delhi, India, Monday, July 29. A court in Punjab state recently ruled that the will of Sir Harinder Singh Brar of Faridkot leaving all his wealth to a trust set up by his palace officials was forged.

Shivan Sarna/AP

Enlarge

A roundup of global reports

Skip to next paragraph Jeremy Ravinsky

Correspondent

Jeremy Ravinsky is an intern at the Christian Science Monitor's international desk. Born and raised in Montreal, Canada, Jeremy has lived in Boston for a number of years, attending Tufts University where he is a political science major. Before coming to the Monitor, Jeremy interned at GlobalPost in Boston and Bturn.com in Belgrade, Serbia.

Recent posts

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

Scheming servants, disinherited princesses, forged wills ? these are standard elements of fantasy. But for the daughters of Sir Harinder Singh Brar, the last Maharajah (or king) of Faridkot, a small city in India, the elements are all part of a very real saga they have endured for more than two decades.

Last Thursday, a judge in Chandigarh, in the northwest state of Punjab, awarded Mr. Brar?s daughters the equivalent of $3.3 billion after ruling that a 31-year old last will and testament that placed his estate in the hands of his servants and lawyers was a forgery. The verdict ended the decades-long legal battle and made the sisters the 33rd richest in India, according to the Guardian.

According to the Hindu newspaper, Maharajah Brar?s servants and lawyers forged the will in 1982, while the maharajah was in the grips of depression following his only son?s death. Instead of awarding his assets to his family, the fraudulent will set up the Maharawal Khewaji?Trust to manage Mr. Brar?s estate.

The suspicion about the will arose as the Maharaja excluded his mother Mohinder Kaur and his wife Narinder Kaur while all the servants, irrespective of their designation, and lawyers were appointed trustees. Amrit had been divested of all the powers of heiress on the grounds that she had married against the wishes of the late Maharaja. Deepinder had been appointed trust chairman on paltry salary of Rs 1,200 per month while Maheepinder Kaur was given a salary of Rs 1,000 a month.

Brar had been the ruler of Faridkot until 1947, when India gained independence from Britain, reports the Times of India. After independence, he was allowed to keep his fortune and properties.

The maharajah died in 1989 and three years later his daughter Amrit Kaur filed a suit against the trust, alleging that the will had been forged. And after 21 years, a court magistrate ruled that the will was a fraud, thereby making the trust?s claim to the estate illegal.

Instead, Brar?s two daughters, Amrit Kaur and Deepinder Kaur, were awarded the remainder of the former royal?s estate, which included several properties and palaces, jewels, and even a private aerodrome, reports the Daily Telegraph. A third daughter, Maheepinder Kaur, died in 2001.

However, according to the Times of India, the Maharawal Khewaji Trust is planning on challenging the ruling to an upper court, with Ranjit Singh, the trust?s legal counsel claiming that ?The will was real and it was not forged.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/eS7smgI2n8k/Fairy-tale-Court-ruling-awards-3.3-billion-to-Indian-princesses

college basketball joe posnanski michael kidd gilchrist national championship calipari national archives brock lesnar

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Iran grants Syria $3.6 billion credit to buy oil products

By Suleiman Al-Khalidi

AMMAN (Reuters) - Syria and Iran signed a deal this week to activate a $3.6 billion credit facility to buy oil products to shore up President Bashar al-Assad's war battered economy, officials and bankers said on Wednesday.

The deal, which was agreed in May and will allow Iran to acquire equity stakes in investments in Syria, is part of Shi'ite Iran's broader support for Assad in his battle against a two-year insurgency by mainly Sunni rebels.

Tehran has already provided military assistance to Assad, training his forces and advising on military strategy. Iranian-backed Hezbollah fighters have also bolstered counter-offensives against rebels around Homs and Damascus.

"This will help Syria to import petroleum products that the country needs," said a Syrian trade official, referring to the credit facility. Underlining the acute nature of Syria's financial problems, he said authorities had tried to set a ceiling of $4 billion on the deal.

Syria is short of diesel for its army and fuel to keep the economy running, partly because of U.S. and European Union financial sanctions imposed after the crackdown on protests at the start of the crisis. Its main supplier of petroleum products by sea has been Iran.

Another $1 billion credit line to Damascus has already been extended to buy Iranian power generating products and other goods in a barter arrangement that has helped Syria export textiles, phosphates and some agricultural produce such as olive oil and citrus products, trade officials say.

"This will allow Syria to import Iranian products up to this ceiling, with almost half to buy electricity equipment for the sector," the trade official, speaking by phone from Damascus, told Reuters.

Alongside the favorable deferred payment terms of those financing facilities, Damascus has been in talks for months to secure a loan of up to $2 billion with low interest and a long grace period, the official said.

STRONG SIGNAL OF SUPPORT

Syria's economy has been hurt by depletion of foreign reserves that were estimated at around $16-18 billion before the crisis. The country had been earning some $2.5 billion a year from oil exports before the crisis.

With the economy on a war footing and military costs spiraling, Syria has been forced to rely increasingly on new credit lines from its main allies. Russia, Iraq and China have provided support - sometimes in the form of barter deals - but not on the scale of this week's deal with Tehran.

Syria's Deputy Prime Minister Qadri Jamil held talks in Moscow last week about a possible Russian loan to Damascus but no agreement has been announced yet.

The latest deal should also ease financial demands on an economy whose $60 billion GDP is estimated to have shrunk by around 30 percent since the conflict began two years ago.

"It's a strong psychological and political message of support from Iran. They are not just giving you a specific loan but they are giving you funds over a long period and (you can) draw as much as you want on items you choose," said Samir Aita, a prominent Syrian economist living abroad.

"The credit facility will allow Syria to spend much needed funds now tied up on other areas," he added.

Although the financing deal provides short-term relief for Syria, it will push up the long-term debt of a country that once prided itself on a low national debt, bankers say.

Bankers say the credit facilities, that will be channeled through the state-owned Commercial Bank of Syria and Iran's Bank Saderat, could also reduce the mounting pressure on the Syrian pound by limiting the need to pay for imported products and foodstuffs with scarce foreign currency.

The pound has crashed as low as one-sixth of its pre-crisis value against the dollar, leading to rampant inflation. Currency traders say the pound plunged to 300 to the dollar earlier this month before recovering to around 200.

"There will be less demand on the dollar when the state gets oil products and flour from Iran and we export to them textiles and some foodstuffs," said Essam Zamrick, deputy head of the Damascus chamber of industry.

Last year Iran and Syria arranged a gasoline-for-diesel swap, but the loss of Syria's main oil producing areas in the east meant that Damascus no longer has the light crude it produced nor the extra gasoline and naphtha it used to export.

Nevertheless, Iran has steadily expanded longstanding economic ties with Syria to help it withstand Western economic sanctions and sealed a free trade deal that granted Syrian exports a low 4 percent customs tariff.

Tehran used to supply Damascus with up to a $1 billion worth of oil products on similar credit terms in the early 1980s before Syria became an oil producer.

BANK VAULTS

Last January, Tehran agreed during a visit by Syrian Prime Minister Wael al-Halki to deposit $500 million in Syria's central bank vaults to prop up the local currency, banking sources say.

The latest credit facility deal was welcomed by a cash-starved business community that has little access to Western financial systems under sanctions.

"These credit facilities will help exporters and businessmen who are suffering from lack of credit and loans that have raised costs and led to a capital flight," said Zamrick.

The deal will also open the door to wider Iranian investments in infrastructure projects such as power plants and heavy industry.

Officials say Iran's strong political support will ensure it gets a lion's share of reconstruction projects, assuming Assad remains in power. Iran and Syria already have an existing car assembly plant, one of several multi-million dollar joint projects that began before the 2011 troubles.

Iranian firms have also been awarded more contracts in the power sector and have signed deals to construct several grain silos which will be financed through the expanded credit lines, one banking source said.

Under that credit financing deal, Syria has also received 250,000 tons of Iranian flour, easing bread shortages in government-held areas caused by the loss to rebels of almost half the northern city of Aleppo, where most of the country's milling capacity existed

(Editing by Dominic Evans and Giles Elgood)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-grants-syria-3-6-billion-credit-buy-164738882.html

snl lindsay lohan valley fever project x the lorax lorax fisker karma super tuesday states