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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50773592/
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Source: http://nmcglynn.com/post/42804989270
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Elementary Schools
Monday, Feb. 4
Sports Chicken Nuggets w/ Star Pretzel Italian Sub Chef Salad w/ Crackers Green Beans Grape Tomatoes Pineapple or Fresh Fruit
Tuesday, Feb. 5
French Toast w/ Sausage Taco Salad w/ Scoops Chef Salad w/ Crackers Corn Chowder Refried Beans Orange Juice or Fresh Fruit
Wednesday, Feb. 6
BBQ Chicken w/ Goldfish Steak & Cheese Sub Chef Salad w/ Crackers Potato Smiles Carrot Sticks Peaches or Fresh Fruit
Thursday, Feb. 7
Chicken Tenders w/ Breadstick Turkey Sub Chef Salad w/ Crackers Tomato Soup Lemony Spinach Pears or Fresh Fruit
Tuesday, Feb. 5
French Toast w/ Sausage Toasty Ham & Cheese Bagel Corn Chowder Applesauce or Fresh Fruit
Freshly made subs and salads are available every day Milk is served with every meal: 1% and Skim White Fat Free Chocolate and Strawberry
Wednesday, Feb. 6
Garlic French Bread Pizza BBQ Pulled Pork Sandwich
Baked Beans Pasta Salad Pineapple or Fresh Fruit
Freshly made subs and salads are available every day Milk is served with every meal: 1% and Skim White Fat Free Chocolate and Strawberry
Thursday, Feb. 7
Chicken Tenders w/ Goldfish Crackers Fajitas w/ peppers & onions Carrot Sticks w/ Hummus Caesar Salad
Fruit Cocktail or Fresh Fruit
Freshly made subs and salads are available every day Milk is served with every meal: 1% and Skim White Fat Free Chocolate and Strawberry
Friday, Feb. 8
Gill?s Fresh Pizza Bagel/Yogurt Box Lunch Roasted Chick Peas Raw Vegetable Medley Pears or Fresh Fruit
Freshly made subs and salads are available every day Milk is served with every meal: 1% and Skim White Fat Free Chocolate and Strawberry
Tuesday, Feb. 5
Bacon Cheeseburger w/ Lettuce, Tomato, Pickle Hot Dog on Roll ? Turkey Wrap Baked Beans Corn Chowder Fruit Cocktail or Fresh Fruit
Freshly made subs and salads are available every day. Milk is served with every meal: 1% and Skim White Fat Free Chocolate and Strawberry
Wednesday, Feb. 6
Cheese Quesadilla w/ Salsa Mac & Cheese Chili in a Bread Bowl Caesar Salad Lemony Spinach Peach Crisp or Fresh Fruit
Freshly made subs and salads are available every day. Milk is served with every meal: 1% and Skim White Fat Free Chocolate and Strawberry
Thursday, Feb. 7
Boneless Chicken Wings w/ Breadstick BBQ Pork Sub ? Turkey Wrap Tuscan Soup French Fries Pineapple or Fresh Fruit
Freshly made subs and salads are available every day. Milk is served with every meal: 1% and Skim White Fat Free Chocolate and Strawberry
Friday, Feb. 8
Gill?s Fresh Pizza Shaved Ham & Cheese Croissant ? Turkey Wrap Creamy Tomato Basil Soup Caesar Salad Pear or Fresh Fruit
Freshly made subs and salads are available every day. Milk is served with every meal: 1% and Skim White Fat Free Chocolate and Strawberry
Source: http://www.londonderrynh.net/2013/02/free-ice-fishing-workshop-offered-in-nh/60061
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'Stay' songwriter joined Rih onstage Sunday night.
By Nadeska Alexis
Mikky Ekko performs at the 55th annual Grammy Awards
Photo: CBS
Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1701707/grammys-mikky-ekko-rihanna.jhtml
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GOBINDPUR, India (Reuters) - A few weather-beaten shipping containers, a swathe of sand and a bitterly divided village: that is all South Korea's POSCO has to show seven years after it announced plans for a $12 billion steel mill on a fertile strip of India's east coast.
Last week, the project took a step forward as land was taken over from farmers for the first time since 2011, and yet Posco is still a long way from its goal of forging steel there.
Despite the years of protests and battles over environmental clearances, Posco insists it is not about to throw in the towel. However, if a court ruling on access to local iron ore goes against it, that could push it over the edge.
The fiasco over what was billed as India's single largest planned foreign investment epitomizes the slow pace of industrialization in a densely populated country where almost every major project involves moving farmers off their land.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has repeatedly vowed to change the snail-like progress of India's biggest industrial developments and end delays to road building and power stations, blamed for dragging economic growth and fuelling inflation.
But the issues refuse to go away.
"Police out! Death to Posco!" a hundred or so villagers and Communist Party activists shouted at a group of policemen who set up camp in the village of Gobindpur last week, the first police presence there since protesters rose up against the project in 2006.
A few kilometers away, POSCO has built a site office in nine shipping containers. Along with a generator, a flimsy barbed-wire fence and a couple of signs, this is all the work that has been done on the 2,000 acres set aside. They need another 700 acres before work can begin.
POSCO India reiterated its "strong resolve and commitment" to the project in a statement on Friday. But analysts say the company may think again if a pending Supreme Court decision on preferential access to a local iron ore mine goes against it.
"They didn't come here because of their love of India," said Rakesh Arora, a metals expert and head of research at Macquarie Capital Securities (India). "Without the iron ore it would be cheaper to set up in China, where the capital costs are lower."
A court in the state of Odisha has already ruled against Posco on guaranteed supplies from the Kandahar iron ore reserve. Last month, the Supreme Court asked the central government for its opinion and it is expected to rule on the case this year.
Two senior sources at the POSCO project said the company would for now wait out the problems and it did not want to upset India, which it sees as an important long-term market.
The company has already scaled down the project because of the protests. Private farms and the village of Dhinkia, where the most fierce opposition has come from, are now excluded from the project's first 4 million metric tonnes per year phase. The final goal is to produce three times that.
POSCO has also pushed its earliest start date back to 2017 after a tribunal suspended environmental clearance for the mill.
VINES OR JOBS
The project has split coastal communities in Odisha. One group of 52 families, for instance, says they were driven from their village by protesters after they criticized the movement's Communist leaders. They now live in one-room houses on a small stipend paid by POSCO.
"The plant will bring jobs. Right now people migrate from here because there is no work," said Kabindra Sahoo, 33, who has not worked since leaving his village six years ago.
At the protest site people see things differently. Jhulia Das is an elderly grower of betel - a vine leaf used to wrap a heady mix known as 'paan' that is chewed by millions of Indians.
Cultivating betel, along with coconuts, rice and cashews, provides a small but steady income for thousands of families living near the proposed mill site. Das fears losing that.
"They will take our land, our mother earth, destroy our vines. How will we survive?" said the tattooed Das, one of a group of barefoot women in bright saris who had joined the protest.
The state of Odisha owns the sandy land for the steel plant by the Bay of Bengal, but farmers like Das have cultivated betel there for years. Posco is paying $21,500 per acre for the land and a small monthly allowance to farmers until the plant opens, when they are promised jobs.
Odisha straddles India's mining belt and holds a third of the country's iron ore reserves, a quarter of its coal, half its bauxite and more than 90 percent of its nickel and chromite. The state accounted for about a fifth of all industrial investment proposals in India in the last four years.
Since January 2008, Odisha has attracted investment proposals worth $210 billion from Tata, Jindal and POSCO, along with global heavyweights such as ArcelorMittal and Vedanta Resources. All have faced protests and delays.
Last week, officials were able to make some progress at the POSCO site, reclaiming some cultivated land. The protests are smaller than they were two years ago, and more farmers are taking the cash and letting police pull down their vines.
But the protesters won this round - after four days the state government suspended the operation until after a session of the state's parliament that ends in March.
(Additional reporting by Jatindra Dash in GOBINDPUR, India and by Meeyoung Cho in SEOUL; Editing by John Chalmers and Robert Birsel)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/protests-sand-no-steel-poscos-fading-india-dream-160615643--finance.html
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LAGOS (Reuters) - South Africa's FirstRand will use Thursday's launch of its new merchant banking business in Nigeria as a springboard to move into retail and commercial lending in Africa's second biggest economy, the bank's chief said.
South Africa's number two lender won Nigeria's first merchant banking license in more than a decade last November and opened its doors in Lagos on Thursday.
Now it wants to expand its operations in Nigeria, organically or through an acquisition, First Rand Chief Executive Sizwe Nxasana told Reuters in Lagos during the launch of Rand Merchant Bank (RMB) Nigeria.
"We are looking at having a universal banking operation in Nigeria ... growing on the back of our investment banking operations into the retail and commercial banking," he said.
"Our appetite for Nigeria is growing and we are going to be looking at opportunities that will put us in a position where we are becoming a seeded player ... in other words among the top five banks in Nigeria in the next few years."
FirstRand has been looking for an entry into Africa's most populous country for years. It ended talks last year to buy a majority stake in Nigeria's Sterling Bank after they both failed to agree on price.
Nxasana said FirstRand was still interested in acquiring one of the three banks, Mainstreet Bank, Keystone Bank and Enterprise Bank that were nationalised two years ago, but could also enter retail operations on its own.
FirstRand in November had said it could spend more than $300 million to buy a retail and commercial bank in Nigeria.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/africas-firstrand-eyes-retail-banking-nigeria-ceo-060046765--finance.html
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? With Google's stock hovering at record highs, Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt plans to sell more than 40 percent of his stock in the Internet search leader this year.
The plan disclosed Friday calls for Schmidt to sell up to 3.2 million shares. If he were to sell all that stock at Google's current price, Schmidt would realize a $2.5 billion windfall.
Schmidt ended December with 7.6 million Google shares, or a 2.3 percent stake in the Mountain View, Calif., company.
He would be left with about 4.4 million shares of Google stock worth another $3.5 billion if he follows through on his divestiture plan for this year. He has gradually been winnowing his holdings in Google in recent years, without giving a specific reason.
Google Inc. declined to comment Friday.
Google's stock rose $11.42 to close at $785.37 Friday. Earlier in the day, it traded at $786.67 ? its highest price since the company went public at $85 per share in August 2004.
Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin are the only company executives who own more stock than Schmidt.
Page controls an 8.7 percent stake and Brin holds an 8.5 percent stake. Each stake is currently worth nearly $20 billion.
Schmidt, 57, was Google's CEO for a decade before turning over the job to Page, 39, in April 2011.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/google-chairman-sell-3-2-million-shares-233254754.html
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