David Coleman, the non-English teacher who wrote the Common Core national English language arts (ELA) standards, is conducting a charm offensive to persuade Christians to embrace the new national standards …read more
Source: The Christian Post
David Coleman, the non-English teacher who wrote the Common Core national English language arts (ELA) standards, is conducting a charm offensive to persuade Christians to embrace the new national standards …read more
Source: The Christian Post
By nikhil jain
I have this above content where in i wan the total of the every row
i.e.
Code:
ELA=20000,POLLK=35000,RH=5000,MH=7000,WH=4359
20000+35000+5000+7000+4359
….
….
…
similarly for other rows how can i do plz helpppp??
…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at The UNIX and Linux Forums
By Dean Popplewell, Contributor
It’s remarkable: capital markets remains composed, likely due to the fact that investors have gotten used to last minute European solutions. From current levels, the recovery potential for the ‘single’ currency is limited if a solution is found. Failure, on the other hand, and the EUR will come under considerable downward pressure, making it almost unavoidable for Cyprus to leave the Eurozone. The EUR weakness could be brief, as the European Central Bank (ECB) will be quick to react to calm the markets through the outright monetary transaction (OMT) or the emergency liquidity assistance (ELA) programs. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
By Tim Worstall, Contributor Paul Krugman points out today that one potential solution to the Cypriot problems is to “do an Iceland“. Let the banks go bust, honor the deposit insurance and let everyone else go hang. Oh, and bring back the Cypriot Pound of course: So then what? As a number of people have pointed out, Cyprus is arguably better positioned than Iceland to do an Iceland, because devaluing a reintroduced Cypriot currency could bring in a lot of tourism. But will the Cypriots — who haven’t even reconciled themselves to the end of their round-tripping business — be willing to go there? Matt Yglesias makes much the same point: The key reason not to leave the eurozone is that doing so would destroy the Cypriot banking system and wipe out lots of people’s savings. But if ELA is withdrawn, the Cypriot banking system will die anyway and everyone’s savings will be lost anyway. Having already lived through the downside, the only path to recovery will be to introduce a new currency. And if that were to happen, then even though Cyprus is small it would be a historic event with reverberations in much larger and more important countries. They’re both correct, so far as they go. And they don’t go quite far enough. For they’ve not quite grasped the religious fervor with which the euro itself is viewed in certain European political quarters (what we might politely call “federast” quarters). …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
European Central Bank funding to Greek lenders rose in December after the ECB started accepting the debt-laden country’s debt as collateral again at its funding operations, Greek central bank figures showed on Monday.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox Business Headlines