Saturday 3 October 2009

The fox stalk me.


How should I think if I see the triple dream? Triple, because the origin comes from three different sources. The three different groups and at least three different parties. Feel complete confusion. Dreams were about my suit. This seems to be stolen from me in one very push hotel. (The almohads mayobki). Next scene, I’m dressing this suit but he is completely caked on my back by someone puig. Than I see myself in dry cleaning shop and the падло are hiding this suit from me. (From the Carvalho and UN story…) In the next, this servant, butler now in my changing room, like a monkeys jump from one closet to another. Offering the suits to me with patterns I won’t. (Dirty, caked suit foretell fraud and warn about danger when dealing with an unknown people. Such dream can presage something which can stain your reputation. Also, can indicate the end of the attachments and affections. Dressing the suit, indicate that you want your power to be noticed.) Only when I arguing with this dream in my sleep and was ready to tell which was the reason of why I spit at the Jew in my bank, - than this weird and triple dream fade away. Instead, appeared one more clown (i.e. politician) carrying in his toot’s, like the dog, who is he in deed, his son to the “big Taicho”. (See the picture today of Lebedev and his son). For that, who say a couple “dreams” before: ‘Give a job – than speak’. Well, the Barroso – don’t have a son, - but the bastard enough to make this kind of requisitions. Or why the Tony Blair is good for EU. I.e. to think about marriage of young Bush daughter with the vybliadok of Tony Blair. What ever, my point is that after this C.I.F. delivery – I woke up. Early at night, I receive blow in my head, but get up fresh. Not too much contempt, nor very sad ether. This was at 5:00 AM. Attripulating all this to the inner process of re-evaluations through which I’m passing. Without too much will to underestimate the significance of what I feel and think. Putting my clothes on, went to the nearby McDonalds take a breakfast. Than some wonder happen to me. Fare to say, that this wasn’t a first time. The fox stalk me in the middle of the Bethnal Green. The street, only a mile away from the City. That centre of Financial World. He runs across the street passing in two feet’s from where I stood. Poor sod, wasn’t in good shape. The right rear fluke was seriously wounded. The first, the second and this time, the same thought pass through my head – ‘Such a good omen man’. After such night, trying to dribble the a seriously bad fortunes of my miserable life, to impromptu mastering a some mapped escape route “out!” for today – I hit this bingo… Pitiable creature saving me from sinking into the total obscurity… Of course, I can attripulate puig in my back like a old Bush vomiting at the Japanese Prime Minister. Or, for this matter, to the “Nine ½ week” with “regular” Croes. But this always will be the situation were I may have let the cat out of the bag. And it’s now running around the room (i.e. the “negocios de grandes superficios”) clawing the sofa and climbing the curtains. Isn’t it cute? No. it isn’t, and no matter how much I try, I still (for the sick of the pirate Solana salary, for the ‘в списках не значился’, and the Basel II Interbank Agreement) have some explaining to do:

Irlandeses aprovaram Tratado de Lisboa com 67,13% dos votos 17h50m. Mais de 67 por cento dos irlandeses votaram a favor do Tratado de Lisboa, anunciou hoje, sábado, a comissão eleitoral irlandesa, depois de estar concluída a contagem da totalidade dos sufrágios do referendo de sexta-feira. O "sim" obteve 67,13 dos votos, referiu a comissão eleitoral. Segundo dados oficiais, o "não" ao Tratado obteve 32,9 por cento dos votos e o índice de participação foi de 58 por cento, mais cinco pontos percentuais do que o valor registado na primeira consulta de 2008, quando o eleitorado irlandês rejeitou o documento.

Avioneta despenha-se durante festival aéreo e faz dois feridos (actual.) Hoje às 17:14 Uma avioneta despenhou-se, este sábado, durante um festival aéreo na Covilhã, disse à TSF uma fonte dos bombeiros da Covilhã. O Centro Distrital de Operações de Socorro (CDOS) da Covilhã avançou à TSF que o acidente provocou dois feridos ligeiros, que foram, entretanto, transportados para o hospital. A avioneta despenhou-se na Quinta da Barreta, na Covilhã, segundo informações do CDOS. Os dois feridos ligeiros resultantes da queda da avioneta já foram transportados para o hospital. O avião é um Chipmunk, uma aeronave histórica da aviação portuguesa que pertencia a um clube suíço que participa no festival.

Air traffic 'up and running again'. Last Updated: Saturday, 03 October 2009, 12:34 GMT Air traffic control systems are back up and running after a breakdown grounded many transatlantic flights leaving the UK. The fault happened at Prestwick airport's air traffic control hub at 8am on Saturday, causing delays at airports across the country, a spokewoman for Nats, which is responsible for the UK's air traffic management, said. Engineers have now resolved the problem and restrictions on flights over the north Atlantic airspace have been lifted, she said. Airports would now be working to clear a backlog of flights that have been unable to leave as a result of the fault. A spokesman for BAA, which owns seven of the UK's major airports including Heathrow, said they were working to get delayed passengers on their way. "There are some delays still but it is getting back to normal," she said. At Heathrow's Terminal Three check-in desks were operating as usual, and there were no warnings of delays on information screens. Elizabeth Langford, 62, from Portsmouth, who was waiting for a flight to New York with her family, said: "We only heard about it when we were on our way to the airport. "When we checked in we were told we might have to wait, but that because it was to do with air traffic control they didn't know how long for." Others had not even been told about the possibilities of delays on their flights across the Atlantic.

And finally, “Ccy eat” Russian owners decide to give away Standard. Audacious gamble sees London's evening paper converted into freesheet. For the first time since it was founded in 1827, the London Evening Standard is to be given away free of charge on the streets of the capital and in the city's schools, universities and offices. The radical change in business strategy represents a major gamble by Alexander Lebedev, the Russian billionaire who acquired London's only paid-for evening newspaper earlier this year, when he bought a majority shareholding for £1 from Associated Newspapers, publishers of the Daily Mail. The plan, which comes into effect on 12 October, involves more than doubling the distribution of the paper to 600,000 and attempting to recover the lost circulation revenue through increased advertising. In an editorial published in yesterday's evening edition, Mr Lebedev pledged his commitment to supporting quality journalism in spite of the decision to give the paper away. "An essential fabric of a free and democratic society is high-quality journalism. It acts as a deterrent against corruption and is a way to highlight what is beneficial and worth celebrating," he said. "The Standard has been producing exceptional journalism since 1827 and that is not going to change under my ownership." Related articles. Geordie Greig: 'I think the digital generation have got used to not paying for information' The news is the latest dramatic development in an evening newspaper war that has continued in London for more than three years. It began with Rupert Murdoch's announcement in 2006 that he would be launching thelondonpaper, a freely distributed title, dependent on advertising revenue. Associated Newspapers, then owner of the Standard, launched its own free paper in response, London Lite. The streets of the capital were transformed as vendors dressed in mauve and purple competed to place copies in the hands of Londoners as they made their way home from work. The Standard saw circulation undermined by the new arrivals but attempted to remain aloof from the battle by celebrating the quality of its journalism and maintaining its cover price. When the heavily loss-making thelondonpaper ceased production last month, amid pronouncements from Mr Murdoch that he wanted his newspapers online and in print to be charging for content, it was thought that the free paper war was over. Yesterday's announcement that the Standard, which boasts high-profile writers such as Simon Jenkins, Brian Sewell and Mihir Bose, will be given away creates the prospect of a new skirmish. Associated's London Lite, which receives stories and articles from the Standard, is now in competition in the free market with Lebedev's paper, in which Associated has retained a 24.9 per cent stake. Associated said yesterday that production of the London Lite was still "business as usual". The Standard's move to a free model will be watched with interest from across the regional and national press, where circulations are in widespread decline but advertising revenues are also in recession. Sources at the Standard say advertising income has improved in recent weeks to levels above those of last year. Andrew Mullins, the Standard's managing director, said that giving the paper away would give the paper a far greater readership in the capital than national titles. "There are so many competing distractions to potential readers, particularly with new technologies," he admitted. "Being a quality newspaper with large scale and reach should transform our commercial fortunes."

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