My story with a girl of our neighbors

I'm from the smoothness of my nails, broken and rima who I loved in my hand alone (of course Mo and alone at night and alone, but the back) my story with a girl of our neighbors
Day I was 15 years and began to show signs of virility  and increasingly linear
I returned from school and throw my bag in the house and go
To our neighbor's house to meet my mistress that I loved at first sight
I used the time that they were asleep when her family to sit alone

 We take some comfort with every day that love within the depths of my heart do not watch Other is in the eye and I always like Ohznha Maihzn monkey mother The relationship has been developed more and more until they do not eat from my hand but do not drink However, from my hands and grow old Sawa (Sawa be feared slide) And my mother always ask me where to go this insanity and what to do when our neighbor, Abu Saad Reveal (sewing doubt be feared, of course) my mother said Fini sure that Rah said Blaa In itself a necessary Arai what to do when our neighbor, Abu Saad One day my mother saw me ironing Darish a man in her lap The player Obosha her hair and even lowered my hand on her breast, she screamed My mother said Yally Matsthi your blood and I who Ongazz Mrtaa 4 and watching my mother with overlooking Darish

This Is My Story With Nature

Eyes staring at the distant horizon and crowded in my head dozens of images and ideas, the complexity of wishes on paper, you may imagine to sometimes the events I hope to be realized if the stop wars and remain the trees guarding the border firm maintains its cities cling to their land, and Talolojoh smiles, lift from the self nightmare heavy


صور الطبيعة








طبيعة

















Becomes the joy of running feet of climbing mountains and valleys, down to every city and home to flood the hearts with joy and pleasure.
Cut meditative quiet when heard the audio singing of the birds and is listening to the melody of life, the time I was standing under a tree trunk, as if my feet Trgemani to stand in the atmosphere was everything the Limoges greenery and life here, walnut trees and geese, pomegranate and there are trees, lemon-laden fruits , the presence of overwhelming natural Isiqz make the blood in my veins and my memory calendar for the past few days, I feel that the beauty of nature must be kept by the panel to draw it as a memory, I put my signature under Vsmtha after that I took my hand where Ciiajeeba transferring the rights from his physical to the spiritual realm Sam afar, delight and happy and like Khalid Naeem.
In this Alastrsalp charming Astrsalat thought and drawing a secret to myself fragrant refreshing make me lightly Vantbht of a nice dream to dream the most beautiful, and visions of fascinating visions superiority and taking, magic, werent my eyes to this charming Fattan that filled the eye and impressed by the heart and if my watching the river and leave the most enjoyable party for myself free rein to roam in the spacious atmosphere of thought and even the deepest cave in the depths of fresh water to the bottom .... and had his voice mixed with twigs Bhviv driven breeze scented flowers Bcma Bay La Sun.
Suspended spiritual and optical film prepared by the other and see if I read the name of my country, I knew it my home, I smiled a smile more than people smile, his greeting echoed the language of the soul, longing, saying: "O river washed away all Cevi way you me A peace ....
Come quietly and silence does not come accompanied by a certain to,
Come behavior is consistent with the pattern of my life that lasted for years, has long without noise,
Come in and one of the regular Hzati when pen and paper beside my hand,
Come for the day and night, in all seasons,
You Smitk Prince of rainy seasons and I do not have enough for me I ask for water than one.
Move the house when Haftik, to put my mind to Stahk, I sit with you, were Dungarees, Otmd on the bed quiet, I'm filled with your voice next to Hanna awakens again all in me, know of the light of my days sweetly Kaadhubp your water on thirst, I embrace the silence, rolling on the Ckurk point of human , a drop of water, take off the fabric body and myself close to my childhood fun and Belaha Hveanha, Osmk panel you Smtni Vetohdna them together.
Oh, How fair, my friend, I did not Otsourk in such majesty and magnificence of this, and what amazes me that your transition from water to the spirit.
You .... are you, O Transit here Oarni grain of sand you are from home and let me leave without a passport, here's looking Onaleom
You for something that is that I read in the newspapers around the world, escape from the decoration to speak, how I wished to Onqta through debate and go to work ... go without introductions Nrcef What's the point that the character over the character and Nhaco books and newspapers, so many words without a goal.
Alone of Icksoni Hanina, take me out to the topography of the country and the only literature I am tempted to write Old and born me and he can not divide us one, replace Baklmi sword and Bhrovi fatally shot Khabay you after I discovered my story with you, but today were overwhelmed with love Blkiek lifted my forehead to the sun and may Mlkny Sultan nature, I felt in my heart I did not feel a new world of before, here I am now become the floor and the nation

Executive Caught Calling Tea Partiers ‘Racist’

Executive Caught Calling Tea Partiers Racist

NPR was jolted Tuesday by the release of a videotape that showed one of the organization’s fund-raising executives repeatedly criticizing conservatives and Tea Party supporters.
The executive, Ron Schiller, was recorded secretly by the Republican filmmaker and mischief-maker James O’Keefe. On the videotape, Mr. Schiller calls Tea Party supporters “seriously racist, racist people,” and says, “In my personal opinion, liberals today might be more educated, fair and balanced than conservatives.”
Dana Davis Rehm, a spokeswoman for NPR, said in a statement Tuesday, “We are appalled by the comments made by Ron Schiller in the video, which are contrary to what NPR stands for.”
The release of the video comes at a sensitive time for NPR. Republicans in Congress who view NPR as biased are trying to cut federal funding for its local stations across the country. They are likely to seize on the video as further evidence of their views and further reason to reduce funding for the stations.
On the secretly recorded video, Mr. Schiller, whose job is to solicit non-federal funding for NPR, says he feels that the organization would be better without the federal funds. He also says that some stations could “go dark” without the funds.
A few hours after the video was published by The Daily Caller, the headline on the popular conservative-leaning news site The Drudge Report was “NPR EXEC: ‘WE WOULD BE BETTER OFF WITHOUT FEDERAL FUNDING’…”
Mr. Schiller is not related to Vivian Schiller, the chief executive of NPR. He is on the way out of NPR: he announced last week, before the videotape was made public, that he was taking a job at the Aspen Institute.
NPR made note of Mr. Schiller’s exit plans in the statement on Tuesday.
Mr. Schiller was essentially set up by Mr. O’Keefe, who has become well-known for such stunts. The people he is heard talking to on the videotape are posing as members of the Muslim Education Action Center Trust, a fictional group. They falsely claim that they want to donate up to $5 million to NPR.
NPR said in the statement that the fake group members “repeatedly pressed us to accept a $5 million check, with no strings attached, which we repeatedly refused.”
The fake group members sometimes bring up topics in an apparent effort to get Mr. Schiller talking. For example, they tell him that their group was founded “by a few members of the Muslim Brotherhood in America” and that it donates money to Muslim schools.
Mr. Schiller answers, “I think what we all believe is if we don’t have Muslim voices in our schools, on the air, it’s the same thing we faced as a nation when we didn’t have female voices.”
NPR was caught up in controversy over alleged bias last fall when it dismissed Juan Williams, a longtime analyst, due to comments he had made on the Fox News Channel, which also employed him as an analyst

 

rain, flooding plague Northeast United States

Joshua Snowcroft has lived through some intense winter weather in the decade he's lived in Vermont. But this winter -- which offered an encore Monday in the form of up to 30 inches of snow -- takes the cake


.
"This is the snowiest, craziest winter I have ever seen in my life," he told CNN on Tuesday, after hand-shoveling enough snow to create a 7-foot pile by the driveway.
"Between brutally cold days of negative 20 with the wind, then two days where the temperature hit 50 and 30 inches of snow in 24 or 48 hours, this is one for the books," said Snowcroft, whose name has been particularly appropriate this winter.
The storm -- the same system that brought tornadoes to Louisiana earlier in the week -- dumped up to 30 inches of snow on parts of Vermont, New York and Maine. It also brought heavy rain to parts of Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts and Virginia and prompted flood warnings and watches as far south as Georgia, according to CNN meteorologist Monica O'Connor.
In Burlington, where the National Weather Service officially reported 17.1 inches of snow but posted reports of up to 30 inches in places, Christopher Reynolds was still cooped up on Tuesday, if comfortably, "with plenty of food for a week if need be."
"It's great to see the sun today -- very pretty with all the pine trees hanging low with their thick coating of snow," he said.
Although many roads were clear, Reynolds and his family were still stuck Tuesday because the family snow removal contractor spent much of the day rescuing people from the snow or getting stuck himself, Reynolds said. By the time he arrived Monday night, he could get only halfway up their driveway before he had to quit.
The snow comes as an unwelcome coda to winter for Vermont, where the 43 inches recorded in February set a record for the month, according to the O'Connor. That being said, heavy March snow is not unheard of in the state -- the record for the month is 47.6 inches, she said.
While the snow was a nuisance, flooding was the greater threat throughout parts of the Northeast.
High water from intense rain caused major flooding along the Housatonic and Still rivers in Connecticut, as well as minor or moderate flooding along the Connecticut, Farmington, Quinnipiac and Pomperaug rivers.
In Oxford, Connecticut, video from CNN affiliate WTNH showed fast-moving floodwater rising almost to the doorknobs of some homes.
Oxford resident A.J. Monaco told the station that the water rose too quickly for him to get anything out of the house.
"Came out of nowhere," he said. "Next thing you know I have 3 feet of water and I had no time to do anything but lock up the house, jump in the truck and watch the water accumulate higher and higher."
Up to 2 1/2 inches of rain are forecast for parts of Connecticut on Thursday, raising the threat of additional flooding in the western part of the state, according to the state Department of Emergency Management and Homeland Security.
The storm also could bring a bit more snow to Vermont

Third U.S. bank regulator criticizes debit fee limit

An employee swipes a customer's credit card through the card reader at a restaurant in Tokyo February 19, 2005. CPROD REUTERS/Issei Kato

The regulator of large U.S. banks said a Federal Reserve proposal to crack down on the fees banks charge retailers when debit cards are used goes too far and could hurt banks over the long run.
John Walsh, acting head of the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, wrote to the Fed on March 4, expressing his concerns over the rule.
"We believe the proposal takes an unnecessarily narrow approach to recovery of costs that would be allowable under the law and that are recognized and indisputably part of conducting a debit card business," he wrote. "This has long-term safety and soundness consequences -- for banks of all sizes -- that are not compelled by the statute."
Banks and retailers are waging a heated lobbying fight over "interchange" fees, which merchants pay banks every time a customer buys something with a debit card.
The crackdown is required by the Dodd-Frank law, which directs the Fed to establish a "reasonable and proportional" fee that banks can charge.
Walsh is the third major banking regulator to voice concerns about the provision.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp Chairman Sheila Bair have argued it could hurt small banking institutions.
In December, the Fed proposed capping fees at 12 cents per debit transaction -- a 75 percent cut from the 2009 average of 44 cents per transaction.
A cap at this level would cost banks about $13 billion in annual revenue, according to CardHub.com.
In a February 22 letter to the Fed, Bank of America said it would get $1.8 billion to $2.3 billion less in fees annually under the crackdown.
Retailers argue banks are charging more than needed to beef up profits.
Community banks and credit unions have been aggressively pushing to have the rule delayed or changed.
The law exempts institutions with less than $10 billion in assets from the crackdown, but these banks argue the Fed rule will set the de facto rate that merchants will charge, an argument rejected by supporters of the crackdown.
Whether Congress will intervene remains unclear.
On Monday, House Financial Services Chairman Spencer Bachus said the House of Representatives would not move legislation unless the Senate supports changing the law.