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Shape 5 Joomla Template Club – Site Shaper Installation – Video


Shape 5 Joomla Template Club - Site Shaper Installation
Learn how to install a Shape 5 site shaper, pre-installed with our products and demo data as a brand new Joomla installation.From:shape5llcViews:0 0ratingsTime:06:13More inHowto Style

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Shape 5 Joomla Template Club - Site Shaper Installation - Video

Fox contact video =Shentia=persian – Video


Fox contact video =Shentia=persian
This Fox Contact component For Joomla 2.5 http://www.From:shentiaspirit2Views:0 0ratingsTime:01:44More inEducation

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Fox contact video =Shentia=persian - Video

Managing comments in WordPress by www.MiaShops.com. – Video


Managing comments in WordPress by http://www.MiaShops.com.
Word Press tutorials by http://www.MiaShops.com where we make having an online store, blog or whatever...easy.From:MiaShopsViews:0 0ratingsTime:07:52More inPeople Blogs

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Managing comments in WordPress by http://www.MiaShops.com. - Video

AP source: Strauss-Kahn, NY hotel maid to settle

NEW YORK (AP) Word of a settlement agreement between former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn and a hotel maid who accused him of trying to rape her could bring an end to a saga that has tarnished Strauss-Kahn's reputation, ended his hopes for the French presidency and renewed a debate about the credibility of sexual assault accusers.

But it might not mean the end of legal troubles for Strauss-Kahn. He is awaiting a ruling on whether he is linked to "pimping" in connection with a French prostitution ring.

A person familiar with the New York case said Thursday that lawyers for Strauss-Kahn and the housekeeper, Nafissatou Diallo, made the as-yet-unsigned agreement within recent days, with Bronx Supreme Court Justice Douglas McKeon facilitating that and a separate agreement to end another lawsuit Diallo filed against the New York Post. A court date is expected next week, though the day wasn't set, the person said.

The person spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity to discuss the private agreement.

If the deal, which comes after prosecutors dropped related criminal charges last year, is veiled by a confidentiality agreement, Strauss-Kahn and Diallo may not speak publicly about a May 2011 encounter that she called a brutally sudden attack and he termed a consensual "moral failing."

Strauss-Kahn lawyer William W. Taylor III declined to comment. Lawyers for the housekeeper didn't immediately respond to phone and e-mail messages.

Strauss-Kahn will pay $6 million to Diallo, according to the French newspaper Le Monde, which cited people close to the French politician. They said he would take out a bank loan for half the amount and borrow the other half from his wife, Anne Sinclair. The two have separated, but Sinclair paid his bail in New York as well as the cost of renting a house in lower Manhattan for $50,000 a month.

According to Le Monde, Strauss-Kahn and Diallo will meet Dec. 7 in the McKeon's chambers to sign the settlement.

Diallo, 33, and Strauss-Kahn, 63, crossed paths when she arrived to clean his luxury Manhattan hotel suite. She told police he chased her down, tried to yank down her pantyhose and forced her to perform oral sex.

The allegation seemed to let loose a spiral of accusations about the sexual conduct of Strauss-Kahn, a married diplomat and economist who had long been dubbed the "great seducer."

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AP source: Strauss-Kahn, NY hotel maid to settle

The Last Word: Sterling's road from kid to commodity

It was an image of everyday innocence. Two boys were playing football, one on one, in Cassiobury Park, Watford. They made the clich complete by using jumpers as goalposts. One was my nephew, Jamie. The other was a friend, Raheem.

They were 14, and being watched by Tom Walley, a venerable youth coach who was a formative influence on such England internationals as Ashley Cole and David James. Instinct told him he had found "a bit of purple, a bit of quality".

He organised pick-up games for the boys on a pitch marked out in the back garden of the home of Tim Sherwood, Tottenham's technical co-ordinator. Walley was old-school and devised the Dustbin Run, a rudimentary stamina test, in a field behind his house, close to the M25.

When Raheem faltered on shuttle runs between refuse and recycling bins set 150 metres apart, Walley marched him inside to tell him his fortune. Character makes a career. Lack of character will leave your life in limbo.

This was when Raheem Sterling was a rumour, before the kid became a commodity. He played with a sense of joy beyond the comprehension of men who insist he is worth the ultimate 18th birthday present, a weekly wage of 50,000. Raheem was a boy with dreams rather than a meal ticket for those with a vested interest in the fog of football's dirty war. Depending on whom you believe, he is consumed by greed and disrespectful to the traditions of Liverpool FC, or a victim being driven into the arms of Manchester City, Tottenham or Arsenal.

The closer we get to the deadline of his birthday, next Saturday, the more frenzied the speculation will become. Briefings, on or off the record, will intensify. Sterling gives the impression of having effectively surrendered control of his destiny.

When he attempted to speak for himself, to his 250,000 followers on Twitter, his message was swiftly deleted. His official account, @Sterling31, was suddenly unavailable yesterday morning. The dispute between his advisers and Liverpool is increasingly poisonous.

Handled poorly, his career could quite easily implode. He is already the subject of grubby gossip about how many children he has fathered. The consensus is two. The caution of Liverpool's manager, Brendan Rodgers, about the toxicity of celebrity is understandable.

No name has been spoken at Anfield with such expectation since the scions of the Shankly era were quietly eulogising a prodigy named Michael Owen.

He was a recognisable product of a football family with middle-class pretensions. Growing up, Sterling was sustained by the protective instincts of a single mother, Nadine, who brought up four children in the most forbidding circumstances.

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The Last Word: Sterling's road from kid to commodity