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Friday, March 1st, 2013 at 10:00pm-1:00am
Free Food Fun Friday
This Friday, the IBA will be co-hosting Free Food Fun Friday with ThinkFast Interactive in the Student Center Atrium from 10pm-1am. The ThinkFast event will consist of two rounds of a trivia game show with each winner receiving $100. All participants receive a personal controller to answer questions with throughout the night. Aside from the trivia there will be a DJ and of course 3 rounds of free food!
For questions please contact Aundrea George at iba.publicrelations@temple.edu
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Location
The area around Liverpool Street Station is in the City of London and is the main business area dominated by the financial industry. The area is pulsating and thronged by business people during the weekdays but during the weekends it is like a dead city. Different types of hotel accommodation are available in the area ranging from the most expensive 5 star hotels to the bed and breakfast cheap hotels. Room rates during the week are the highest in London but during the weekends you can get very good bargains as hoteliers struggle to fill the vacant rooms.
For tourists, the area has only a few attractions such as the Tower of London and St. Pauls Cathedral whereas most other top attractions of the city are located on the other side of the city but there is good connectivity from Liverpool Street station which is both an Underground station and a railway station. It is the third biggest station in all of the UK. As such, because of the good connectivity, many tourists prefer to stay in the budget hotels that are found in large numbers near the station. The Underground is the fifth busiest in the entire system and using the same is an unforgettable experience. Liverpool Street houses some of the citys skyscrapers and other remarkable buildings. There is a plethora of luxury accommodation in the area and some of the best hotels of the city are located here.
In recent years, budget chains have established many hotels in this area with Ibis, Travelodge and Premier Inn being well represented. The cheapest rooms during the weekend can probably be obtained in one of the four sites of Travelodge in the City. The rest of the hotels near Liverpool Street are mostly full service 3 and 4 star chain hotels. The 4 star hotels around Liverpool Street can be some of the cheapest in the centre of the city during the weekend.
A budget traveller can check out the Kings Cross Bed and Breakfast hotels as Kings Cross/St Pancras are well connected to Liverpool Street by Underground. Some of the best value cheap hotels of the city are located opposite Kings Cross Station.
The facilities in the hotels in the area depend on the type of hotel but most of them provide comfortable accommodation with at least the essential facilities.
To avail of special offers and discounts the best time is the weekend when business travellers vacate their rooms and hoteliers are eager to fill their room vacancies.
Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Hotels-Near-Liverpool-Street-London/4462944
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This undated image provided by Adidas shows models wearing new college basketball uniforms for, from left, Cincinnati, Kansas, Notre Dame, Baylor, UCLA and Louisville. (AP Photo/Adidas)
This undated image provided by Adidas shows models wearing new college basketball uniforms for, from left, Cincinnati, Kansas, Notre Dame, Baylor, UCLA and Louisville. (AP Photo/Adidas)
CINCINNATI (AP) ? College basketball's tournament time is taking on a new look this year, with lots of double-takes expected.
Six teams will wear special uniforms for their conference and anticipated NCAA tournament appearances next month, setting a fashion trend in college basketball: camouflage-patterned shorts, bright-colored jerseys and sleeves.
Sleeves?
Yep. Sleeves on jerseys, including those worn by tradition-rich UCLA, giving March's rich history a decidedly unconventional look. Six teams will wear special tournament uniforms unveiled on Thursday by Adidas ? UCLA, Louisville, Baylor, Kansas, Notre Dame and Cincinnati.
"I'm sure the traditionalists out there are really, really struggling looking at those uniforms," Cincinnati coach Mick Cronin said on Thursday.
Especially those worn by UCLA, Louisville and Baylor, which agreed to have short sleeves on their jerseys. Adidas debuted a short-sleeve basketball shirt with the NBA's Golden State Warriors in mid-February.
The new look will be especially head-turning for teams that usually wear tradition on their chests.
"Everyone here knows Kansas' tradition and history should be what is promoted in our look, and we have done that for years," coach Bill Self said. "But this is the one game or whatever that we will make that exception for Adidas.
"I probably don't think as much of them as I do the normal ones we wear, but for a game or two I don't think it's that big of a deal in the Big 12 tournament."
Alternate uniforms have become big business in college sports, from Oregon's fluorescent tones with Nike to Maryland's loud designs with Under Armour. Adidas introduced special light-weight basketball uniforms for Cincinnati, Louisville and Baylor at tournament time last season.
Baylor and Louisville got the most attention with their bright colors. Cincinnati's were more subdued, with neon trim. Bearcats players quickly took a liking to them ? Cincinnati reached the Big East tournament title game before losing to Louisville, then made the round of 16 in the NCAA tournament while wearing them.
"It's like it refreshes you as a team," point guard Cashmere Wright said before practice on Thursday. "You go out there and it's a whole other uniform. You can take any identity you want to take. Last year, we got an identity and we just played it out."
No. 6 Kansas, No. 10 Louisville and No. 21 Notre Dame are currently ranked in the AP Top 25. UCLA, Cincinnati and Baylor are expecting to join them in the NCAA tournament wearing their new gear.
The second-ranked Notre Dame women and No. 16 Louisville will also wear the gear.
Players like the light-weight uniforms and love the flashy look. They also like the way they stand out from the rest of the tournament crowd.
"It's an interesting phenomenon, the whole uniform-shoe thing with young people, having something that nobody else has," Cronin said.
Adidas checked with the schools to see if they were interested in the tournament designs. Not everyone liked the sleeves ? Cronin turned down the idea for his Bearcats.
"I'm happy they don't have sleeves," Wright said.
The sleeves seem to be the biggest attention-getter, a reminder of the sport's fledgling days. Xavier coach Chris Mack wore sleeved jerseys when he played at Evansville in the late 1980s, getting over his disdain for the look.
"Aesthetically, I thought they were really ugly," Mack said on Thursday. "But it's just ironic because so many guys wore T-shirts ? I think it started with Patrick Ewing and Chris Mullin wearing T-shirts under their uniforms, which is comfortable for some guys. But I thought the one-uniform-T-shirt look was a little outdated and strange."
Outdated? Not anymore.
___
Freelance writer Kathleen Gier in Lawrence, Kan., contributed to this report.
___
Follow Joe Kay on Twitter: http://twitter.com/apjoekay
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ABUJA (Reuters) - Nigeria's state oil firm has told politicians any move to block its deals to finance payment of $3.5 billion owed to fuel traders could expose Africa's second-largest economy to a sovereign credit downgrade or a banking crisis.
Major oil trading houses including Vitol , Glencore, Trafigura and Mercuria are owed millions of dollars by Nigeria for fuel deliveries, according to a government-commissioned report released last year.
The Nigerian National Petroleum Corp (NNPC) accumulated the debts to traders, some of which are three years old, due to non-payment of fuel subsidies by the government, the head of the company told parliament on Monday.
The Finance Ministry did not respond to calls for comment.
Trafigura, Mercuria, Vitol and Glencore all declined comment.
Group Managing Director Andrew Yakubu told lawmakers NNPC was borrowing $1.56 billion through a special purpose vehicle to offset part of the fuel import debts and that it had allocated 15,000 barrels per day of oil output for a period of up to five years to pay back the money, the company said in a statement.
Standard Chartered, which managed the banking deal, declined official comment.
Yakubu said the company planned to settle the remaining debts through a second such forward sales arrangement as well as internal resources.
Lawmakers have questioned the fund-raising deal, saying NNPC is not allowed to take out loans under rules set out in the constitution.
NNPC says it was not a loan.
"The exposure of domestic banks is about $1.5 billion, and a default of this magnitude of exposure could lead to another round of banking crisis," NNPC said in a statement.
"The NNPC GMD stated that the continued delay has dire consequences ranging from a major negative impact on the sovereign credit rating to costly litigation against the federal government in foreign courts," it added.
The House of Representatives committee asked to see NNPC's documents and said it would investigate.
CREDIT RATING
Credit rating agency Standard and Poor's upgraded Nigeria in November, citing improved financial stability and optimism over banking and electricity reforms. Its ratings from the three major agencies are still in junk territory, however, at BB- from S&P and Fitch and Ba3 from Moody's.
Nigeria's banking crisis ended with a sharp recovery in bank earnings last year after a 2009 credit crisis led to the near collapse of nine lenders.
OPEC member Nigeria is among the world's top 10 crude oil exporters but has insufficient refining capacity to meet its domestic fuel needs and relies heavily on imports of oil products. The government uses subsidies to keep a lid on retail petrol prices.
President Goodluck Jonathan attempted to end fuel subsidies a year ago but backed down after it sparked widespread protests.
Decades of mismanagement and corruption have left NNPC heavily indebted, several audits have shown.
Trading companies have been battling for months to recoup the money, and some have stopped supplying Nigeria with fuel. Most have remained in the west African country, however, partly because of the huge opportunities it presents in the trading of crude oil.
The government-commissioned report showed that Glencore was owed $138 million, Vitol $198 million and Trafigura $53 million.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/state-oil-firm-warns-nigeria-rating-risk-debt-151648735--finance.html
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Former Haitian Dictator Jean Claude "Baby-Doc" Duvalier, center, listens as charges against him are announced during an appeals court hearing in Port-au-Prince on Thursday. Duvalier appeared in court on Thursday for the first time to face charges he was responsible for corruption and serious human rights violations during his 15-year rule.
By Jean Valme, Reuters
PORT-AU-PRINCE ? Former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier faced corruption and human rights charges in a court on Thursday for the first time since a popular revolt forced him into exile in 1986, and denied responsibility for abuses under his 15-year rule.
Individual government officials "had their own authority," the 61-year-old Duvalier said when asked about his role as head of state from 1971 to 1986. "Under my authority, children could go to school, there was no insecurity."
Duvalier, who had boycotted three previous court hearings, struck a mostly defiant tone during a four-hour grilling by a panel of three judges in a packed and sweltering courtroom.
After his last no-show a week ago, Judge Jean-Joseph Lebrun issued a warrant ordering his presence, under police escort if necessary.?
Duvalier, dressed in a navy-blue suit and tie, slipped into the courthouse unescorted early on Thursday, arriving in his own car several hours before the hearing started accompanied by his longtime companion Veronique Roy.?
'Long live Duvalier'
Hundreds of Duvalier supporters gathered outside the courthouse soon after his arrival, some dancing and chanting "Long live Duvalier."
The pretrial Appeal Court hearing was held to determine what charges Duvalier may have to face. It is the first time he has personally been required to address crimes allegedly committed during his rule.?
International human rights observers are closely watching the case and consider it an important test of Haiti's weak justice system after decades of dictatorship, military rule and economic mayhem.
"Whatever happens next, Haitians will remember the image of their former dictator having to answer questions about the repression carried out under his rule," said Reed Brody, a spokesman for Human Rights Watch.?
During the hearing Duvalier was asked by the judges about more than a dozen of the most notorious cases involving alleged extra-judicial killings and detention of political prisoners.
'Calm, almost indifferent'
"He was asked tough questions and his answers were mostly evasive," said Amanda Klasing, a researcher with Human Rights Watch who attended the hearing.
"He was very calm, almost indifferent. His facial expression didn't change at all," she said.
Several alleged victims were in court and expressed satisfaction that he had finally appeared.
"He will have to face history in court, just like other dictators around the world are facing," said Alix Fils-Aime, who was imprisoned by Duvalier's government.
The hearing was adjourned in the afternoon and is set to resume next Thursday.
Reynold Georges, who heads Duvalier's legal team, had argued unsuccessfully at a hearing last week that his client's presence in court was not required.
Duvalier was briefly detained on charges of corruption, theft and misappropriation of funds after returning to the impoverished Caribbean nation in January 2011 following a 25-year exile in France. Those charges are still pending.
Separate charges of crimes against humanity filed by alleged victims of wrongful imprisonment, forced disappearances and torture under Duvalier, were set aside by a judge last year because the statute of limitations had run out.?
But the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, has warned Haitian authorities that there is no statute of limitations under international law for serious violations of human rights.
Return from exile
Critics say prosecutors have been too lenient in Duvalier's case. President Michel Martelly's government recently renewed Duvalier's diplomatic passport, saying he was entitled to it as a former head of state.
Duvalier, who inherited the title "President For Life" at the age of 19, is alleged to have fled Haiti with more than $100 million stashed in European bank accounts in 1986 after street demonstrations and riots broke out in a number of cities.?
His departure ended nearly three decades of dictatorship begun by his father, Fran?ois "Papa Doc" Duvalier, in 1957.?
The Duvaliers enforced their rule with the aid of a feared militia, the National Security Volunteers, better known as the "Tonton Macoutes," who were blamed for hundreds of deaths and disappearances.?
Soon after he returned to Haiti in 2011, taking up residence in a villa in a posh suburb in the hills above the capital Port-au-Prince, Duvalier issued a brief apology "to those countrymen who rightly feel they were victims of my government," the first public recognition of abuses under his rule.?
While in exile, Duvalier acknowledged privately that killers in his government went unpunished, according to Bernard Diederich, a New Zealand-born journalist and author of several books on Haiti, including a biography of the younger Duvalier.?
"He always passed the blame to others," said Diederich, who conducted four long interviews with Duvalier in the late 1990s.
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