Tuesday, July 5, 2011

English Lessons

Could we push back the meeting to six?

Let's push it back half an hour.

Could we push it back slightly?

Could we move up the meeting a few days?

Could you take me at one?

Could you write me in?

Can I reschedule for Monday afternoon?
Explaining circumstances
I have a conflict in my schedule.

I'm running ahead of schedule.

I'm running behind schedule.

Something's come up.

She:
So we'll go for a ride on Saturday?
He:
Yes, if it doesn't rain.
She:
If it does, come the day before.

Nuestro objetivo es satisfacer las necesidades lingüísticas y culturales de los extranjeros de visita de trabajo, o que residen en los EE.UU. y los países vecinos.

  INGLÉS BÁSICO
Este curso está dirigido a darle una buena base de Inglés hablado.
Se hace especial hincapié en la producción de buen tono, mientras que el uso y reconocimiento de vocabulario básico y estructuras de frases. Diálogos cortos y las actividades de clase se practican para mejorar la fluidez y precisión al hablar. Al finalizar el curso, usted debería ser capaz de reconocer y responder apropiadamente a alta frecuencia y las expresiones sobre temas familiares.


Nuestros cursos de idiomas Inglés constará de dos niveles. Se recomiendan para aquellos con un interés serio en aprender a entender hablar, leer y escribir en Inglés. Los estudiantes son motivados a dedicar una o dos horas adicionales privados un día para el estudio del idioma Inglés.
Nuestras clases son impartidas por nativos cualificados y experimentados instructores de habla Inglés. Las clases son pequeñas (tamaño oscila entre 1 a 4) para permitir la máxima participación.

English Lessons

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Our American English language courses consist of two levels. They are recommended for those with a serious interest in learning to understand speak, read and write English. Students are encouraged to devote one to two additional private hours a day to the study of the English language. Our classes are taught by qualified and experienced native speaking English instructors. Classes are small (size ranges from 1 to 4 ) to allow maximum participation .
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I used to lie on the floor for hours after
school with the phone cradled between
my shoulder and my ear, a plate of cold
rice to my left, my school books to my right.
Twirling the cord between my fingers
I spoke to friends who recognized the
language of our realm. Throats and lungs
swollen, we talked into the heart of the night,
toying with the idea of hair dye and suicide,
about the boys who didn’t love us,
who we loved too much, the pang
of the nights. Each sentence was
new territory, like a door someone was
rushing into, the glass shattering
with delirium, with knowledge and fear.
My Mother never complained about the phone bill,
what it cost for her daughter to disappear
behind a door, watching the cord
stretching its muscle away from her.
Perhaps she thought it was the only way
she could reach me, sending me away
to speak in the underworld.
As long as I was speaking
she could put my ear to the tenuous earth
and allow me to listen, to decipher.
And these were the elements of my Mother,
the earthed wire, the burning cable,
as if she flowed into the room with
me to somehow say, Stay where I can reach you,
the dim room, the dark earth. Speak of this
and when you feel removed from it
I will pull the cord and take you
back towards me.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

English Lessons

DIRECTIONS: Read the following and answer all the questions?
http://www.americanenglishconversation.com/
http://www.freeenglishconversation.blogspot.com/
http://www.grammar-help.blogspot.com/
  
http://freeenglishlessons-denise.blogspot.com/ 
The United States is entering the next round of a nationwide boxing match over public pensions, with states approving changes to the funds, a leading municipal union challenging claims of yawning shortfalls and a research group advocating moderation.

Pension
Darren Robb | Stone | Getty Images

All this comes as the federal government gears up to next week's release of long-awaited drafts of new requirements for pension funds' financial reporting.
On Tuesday, New Jersey's governor signed a law requiring increases in employee contributions into the state's pension system along with an end to cost-of-living increases for benefits. Meanwhile, last week, Connecticut's public employee unions rejected the governor's proposal to have workers pay more for benefits.
Most money to pay retirees comes from earnings on pension fund investments, which were devastated during the financial crisis. As states' revenues collapsed after the longest and deepest downturn since the Great Depression, many also cut funding contributions to the plans each year.
While almost everyone agrees that pension funds have enough money on hand to pay current retirees, taxpayers and investors in the $2.9 trillion municipal bond market are growing increasingly nervous about how they will cover costs in the coming decades.
In a report released Wednesday, the National Institute of Retirement Security said it identified policies that "taken together, increase the likelihood of maintaining a well-funded pension plan at an affordable cost."
The group found that in the best-managed plans, employers maintain their annual required contributions, employees help share in the plan's cost, actuaries assess changes and adjustments, and funds rely on reasonable economic assumptions.
"While the Great Recession has presented some funding challenges to public pensions, when the economy recovers, government entities will have to compete for talent with private-sector employers — who may be able to offer higher salaries, stock options, or profit-sharing programs," the group said. "Providing an adequate and affordable pension benefit is one way to help attract a quality workforce."
The group primarily found that pension funds that were well-funded before the recession are still in good shape, but those that had looser management are suffering.
Union Talks Back
On Tuesday, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees struck back at a report by Joshua Rauh of Northwestern University and Robert Novy-Marx of the University of Rochester that concluded each household in the United States will have to increase its tax payment by $1,398 every year for the next 30 years to fully fund pensions, "The reasons we have contribution increases now is to make up for investment losses," said Steve Kreisberg, director of collective bargaining at the union, in a call with reporters.
Kreisberg said individuals in the private sector are also having to temporarily compensate for market losses in their 401(k) retirement accounts. He noted that as the stock market has recovered, pension investments have achieved healthy returns. By making more money on investments, funds will not have to pass on a hefty bill to the taxpayer, he said.
The Governmental Accounting Standards Board, which sets the procedures for public agencies' accounting, met in Connecticut this week to discuss more comprehensive disclosure of pension liabilities. It will send out two drafts detailing proposed changes for comment at the end of next week. The final versions will likely be issued in 2012 with the rules taking effect in 2013, according to the group's spokeswoman.

On Tuesday, New Jersey's governor signed a law requiring increases in employee contributions into the state's pension system along with an end to cost-of-living increases for benefits?
A. TRUE
B. FALSE 

The Governmental Accounting Standards Board, which sets the procedures for public agencies' accounting, met in Connecticut this week to discuss more comprehensive disclosure of pension liabilities?
A. TRUE
B. FALSE  

English Lessons

DIRECTIONS: Read the following and answer all the questions?
http://www.americanenglishconversation.com/
http://www.freeenglishconversation.blogspot.com/
http://www.grammar-help.blogspot.com/
  
http://freeenglishlessons-denise.blogspot.com/
The June jobs report looms as the next hurdle for a stock market that has gone from gloom to boom with its best weekly performance in nearly two years.


Winston Davidian | Photodisc | Getty Images

Stocks soared, the dollar slumped and Treasury yields rose in the past week as some U.S. economic data showed signs of improvement and the Greek government adopted austerity measures, allowing it to collect international funding in a temporary solution to its debt struggles.
"I think part of it was the data got better, and people got caught short going into the end of the quarter. Not only was it end of month. It was end of quarter. People became very risk averse. You had the hedge fund guys taking increasingly short positions. Then the data got a little better, and we had Greece," said Richard Bernstein, chief executive officer of Richard Bernstein Advisors.
Bernstein, while still bullish, became more cautious on stocks in the past couple months. "My argument is the data is kind of in the middle of the road. I still think it's going to pay to be optimistic, but I think the data is going to be kind of wishy washy. If we come back in six months, we think the data is going to be better," he said. "I don't think we're completely out of the soup yet."
The big number in the week ahead is Friday's June employment report, expected to show that just 100,000 new jobs were added for the month. Other data includes the ADP private sector jobs report and ISM nonmanufacturing survey on Wednesday. Chain stores report monthly sales on Thursday.
Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com, like other economists, sees little chance of a pickup in jobs this month or next. He predicts an above average consensus of 125,000 for nonfarm payrolls in June.
"That's still well under the 200,000 we were getting on a consistent basis earlier in the year. This report at least is another one that's going to be subpar...I do predict by September and October, we'll see better numbers and back toward the end of the year, it will get back to 200,000. There are key assumptions. Oil prices can't go back up. That would derail things, and they've (Congress) got to pass this debt ceiling in a reasonable way without derailing things," he said.
All three major stock market indices in the past week had their best week since July 2009. The Dow rose 5.4 percent to 12582; the S&P 500 jumped 5.6 percent to 1339, and the Nasdaq was up 6.2 percent at 2816.
As stocks rose, the bond market tumbled, sending rates higher. The 10-year was yielding 3.199 percent Friday, well above the week earlier's 2.184 percent level. The dollar slid and was down 2.4 percent against the euro, which was at 1.4524. Oil on the Nymex rose 4.2 percent to $94.94, and Brent crude rose 6.3 percent to $111.77 per barrel.
Econorama
"I think the most important thing will be the U.S. data that comes out. If we get further confirmation there's this bounce going on, I think that's going to be the dominating force," said Jens Nordvig, global head of G-10 foreign exchange strategy at Nomura Securities. "If you look at global markets broadly, one of the things that's important is we had a mega rally in rates, including in countries where central bankers are on a tightening path."
Nordvig expects the dollar to remain under pressure in the week ahead, particularly if the U.S. data are better than expected. "I think in the current environment the dollar is going to be grinding weaker," he said, adding he expects the euro to head toward 1.50. The European Central Bank meets Thursday and is expected to raise interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point.
The U.S. data that got markets excited this past week were the better-than-expected pending home sales, the Chicago purchasing managers report and the national ISM manufacturing index. The June manufacturing data, on the headline, was 55.3, better than the 51.8 expected. The market had been positioned for a particularly weak number the week earlier because of disappointing readings on the Philadelphia Fed survey and the Empire State survey.
Economists looked at the pickup by the ISM as a sign that the slowdown in the economy may be the result of temporary factors, including the supply chain disruption from the Japanese earthquake and the jump in oil and other commodities prices. They caution, however, that the components of the report were not all positive, including a build in inventories and lack of growth in orders. 
Zandi points out that the ISM improvement is important because while manufacturing is just 15 percent of GDP and 10 percent of jobs, it represented about half the GDP growth in the past two years. "Manufacturing's contribution this time has been bigger than in any other recovery back to World War II," he said.
Markets are also watching the efforts between Congress and President Obama to reach a compromise on deficit reduction and an agreement to raise the debt ceiling.
Brian Dolan of GFT Forex expects more dollar weakness in the week ahead. "If the market wants to jump on this debt stalemate, that's a nice excuse to jump on the dollar as well. I think these guys are going to take it to the line," he said.
Other data in the coming week include factory orders on Tuesday; weekly jobless claims on Thursday and wholesale trade and consumer credit on Friday. The markets are closed Monday for the fourth of July holiday.

 The June jobs report looms as the next hurdle for a stock market that has gone from gloom to boom with its best weekly performance in nearly two years?
 A. TRUE
B. FALSE 

Other data in the coming week include factory orders on Tuesday; weekly jobless claims on Thursday and wholesale trade and consumer credit on Friday?
A. TRUE
B. FALSE  

English Lessons

DIRECTIONS: Read the following and answer all the questions?
http://www.americanenglishconversation.com/
http://www.freeenglishconversation.blogspot.com/
http://www.grammar-help.blogspot.com/
  
http://freeenglishlessons-denise.blogspot.com/  
President Barack Obama pressed his case Saturday for achieving deficit reduction, in part by ending tax breaks and singling out hedge fund managers, oil companies and billionaires to take the hit.
President Obama
CNBC
President Obama speaking Wednesday at a press conference about debt and the economy

Obama, a Democrat, is locked in a dispute with Republicans over how to bring down the U.S. deficit as part of a deal to raise the debt ceiling and prevent Washington from default.
Democrats insist that some tax increases be included in a deficit-cutting package.   Republicans say that would be bad for the economy.
"Now, it would be nice if we could keep every tax break, but we can't afford them," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address.
"Because if we choose to keep those tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires, or for hedge fund managers and corporate jet owners, or for oil and gas companies pulling in huge profits without our help - then we'll have to make even deeper cuts somewhere else."
Obama listed a range of areas, some of which are considered top Democratic political priorities, that would face the chopping block if such tax breaks were allowed to continue.
"We've got to say to a student, 'You don't get a college scholarship.' We have to say to a medical researcher, 'You can't do that cancer research.' We might have to tell seniors, 'You have to pay more for Medicare,"' he said.
"That isn't right, and it isn't smart. We've got to cut the deficit, but we can do that while making investments in education, research and technology that actually create jobs."
Senator Dan Coats, delivering the weekly Republican address, said reducing spending was the key.
"The president and Democrats in Congress must recognize that their game plan is not working," he said. "It's time to acknowledge that more government and higher taxes is not the answer to our problem. It's time for bold action and a new plan to address our current crisis."

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has warned of huge risks if Congress fails to raise the $14.3 trillion debt ceiling by Aug. 2, potentially triggering a default that could send shivers through an already-fragile banking system.
Obama said both sides agreed spending cuts were necessary and said he and Vice President Joe Biden had made progress in getting lawmakers to agree on areas to cut.
"Over the last few weeks, the vice president and I have gotten both parties to identify more than $1 trillion in spending cuts," Obama said.
"But after a decade in which Washington ran up the country's credit card, we've got to find more savings to get out of the red. That means looking at every program and tax break in the budget - every single one - to find places to cut waste and save money."
Fears of a default, which could disrupt everything from debt payments to retirement benefits, rose after Republicans walked out of budget negotiations led Biden last week.
Coats said Obama had to step up to get a deal done.
"Now is the time for decisive leadership from this president," he said. "It's time to cast aside the false safety of political denial and re-election hopes and put the future of our country above all else."

President Barack Obama pressed his case Saturday for achieving deficit reduction, in part by ending tax breaks and singling out hedge fund managers, oil companies and billionaires to take the hit?
A. TRUE
B. FALSE  

Fears of a default, which could disrupt everything from debt payments to retirement benefits, rose after Republicans walked out of budget negotiations led Biden last week?
A. TRUE
B. FALSE   

English Lessons

DIRECTIONS: Read the following and answer all the questions?
http://www.americanenglishconversation.com/
http://www.freeenglishconversation.blogspot.com/
http://www.grammar-help.blogspot.com/
  
http://freeenglishlessons-denise.blogspot.com/  
Twenty-eight hours after a housekeeper at the Sofitel New York said she was sexually assaulted by Dominique Strauss-Kahn, she spoke by phone to a boyfriend in an immigration jail in Arizona.
Second Annual Conference of International Monetary Fund
Getty Images

Investigators with the Manhattan district attorney’s office learned the call had been recorded and had it translated from a “unique dialect of Fulani,” a language from the woman’s native country, Guinea, according to a well-placed law enforcement official.
When the conversation was translated — a job completed only this Wednesday — investigators were alarmed: “She says words to the effect of, ‘Don’t worry, this guy has a lot of money. I know what I’m doing,’ ” the official said.
It was another ground-shifting revelation in a continuing series of troubling statements, fabrications and associations that unraveled the case and upended prosecutors’ view of the woman. Once, in the hours after she said she was attacked on May 14, she’d been a “very pious, devout Muslim woman, shattered by this experience,” the official said — a seemingly ideal witness.
Little by little, her credibility as a witness crumbled — she had lied about her immigration, about being gang raped in Guinea, about her experiences in her homeland and about her finances, according to two law enforcement officials.
She had been linked to people suspected of crimes. She changed her account of what she did immediately after the encounter with Mr. Strauss-Kahn. Sit-downs with prosecutors became tense, even angry. Initially composed, she later collapsed in tears and got down on the floor during questioning. She became unavailable to investigators from the district attorney’s office for days at a time.
Now the phone call raised yet another problem: it seemed as if she hoped to profit from whatever occurred in Suite 2806.
The story of the woman’s six-week journey from seemingly credible victim, in the eyes of prosecutors, to a deeply unreliable witness, is drawn from interviews with law enforcement officials, statements from the woman’s lawyer and a letter from prosecutors to Mr. Strauss-Kahn’s defense team released in court on Friday.
Some of the events were confirmed by both law enforcement officials and the women’s lawyer; others rely solely on law enforcement officials. In the end, it was the prosecutors’ assessment of the housekeeper’s credibility that led them to downgrade their confidence in the case and agree on Friday that Mr. Strauss-Kahn could be freed from house arrest.
In the beginning, her relationship with prosecutors was strong. Her account seemed solid. Over time, the well-placed official said, they discovered that she was capable of telling multiple, inconsistent versions of what appeared to be important episodes in her life.
After the encounter with Mr. Strauss-Kahn, she asked her supervisor at Sofitel, “Can any guest at the hotel do anything they want with us?” her lawyer, Kenneth P. Thompson, said during a sidewalk press conference on Friday defending her.
The supervisor called security, and officers, finding semen on the floor and wall, called the police, setting off the quick chain of events that led to police officers escorting Mr. Strauss-Kahn off an Air France plane set to depart Kennedy International Airport.
Suspicions of the woman’s associations arose relatively quickly: within a week of Mr. Strauss-Kahn’s arrest, the authorities learned of a recorded conversation between the subject of a drug investigation and another man, who said his companion was the woman involved in the Strauss-Kahn matter, according to another law enforcement official.
Prosecutors and investigators interviewed the woman at length.
Her immigration history was a focus. At first, she told them what she told immigration officials seven years ago in her accounts of how she fled Guinea and her application for asylum on Dec. 30, 2004. She described soldiers destroying the home where she lived with her husband, and said they were both beaten because of their opposition to the regime. She said her husband died in jail.
But then, in a subsequent interview with Manhattan prosecutors, she said the story was false, one she had been urged to tell by a man who gave it to her on a cassette recording to memorize. She had listened to the recording repeatedly.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn
Don Emmert | AFP | Getty Images
Dominique Strauss-Kahn with his wife Anne Sinclair at New York State Supreme court.

The housekeeper also told investigators that she had been gang raped in Guinea. She cried and became “markedly distraught when recounting the incident,” according to a letter to the defense from prosecutors released Friday.
But she later admitted that that, too, was a lie, once again one she had told to help her application for asylum. She said she was indeed raped in Guinea, but not in the way she had described.
Her lawyer, Mr. Thompson, said she was desperate to leave Guinea, and had been encouraged to embellish her application for asylum.
The boyfriend in the Arizona detention center was another issue. He had been arrested while bartering counterfeit designer clothing from Manhattan’s Chinatown for marijuana in the Southwest, the well-placed law enforcement official said. Her lawyer said she did not know the man was “a drug dealer.”
Meanwhile, as the interviews continued, the relationship grew more strained. During a meeting at the district attorney’s office on June 9, the woman wept as she was questioned closely after Mr. Thompson had left for another engagement.
Her 15-year-old daughter, who was waiting outside, noticed that her mother was upset and called a relative to alert Mr. Thompson. The lawyer called the prosecutors and demanded an end to the questioning. He said on Friday that the daughter heard them shout, “Get out! Get out! Get out of here!” at her mother. The authorities say there was no shouting.
At another meeting, the woman threw herself to the floor in response to questions, the well-placed official said.
Then, for some 10 days, prosecutors were unable to get Mr. Thompson to bring her in; the lawyer said she was being treated for a shoulder injury that she suffered in the attack, an injury she had not reported earlier.
The final meeting occurred on Tuesday in the seventh-floor offices of the district attorney at 1 Hogan Place. It began at 11 a.m. and lasted five or six hours, except for a short lunch break, around an oval table in a conference room in the offices of the Public Integrity Unit.
It was devastating. In recent weeks, investigators collected bank records showing deposits of thousands of dollars in Arizona, Georgia, New York and Pennsylvania to an account in her name.

The woman had repeatedly said that the Sofitel was her only source of income.
Now, investigators confronted her with the bank records.
The woman, silent, turned to Mr. Thompson, seemingly pleading for direction on how to respond. He seemed startled.
“He was speechless,” the well-placed official said.
The district attorney’s office said the woman had lied about her income to maintain her public housing, and had claimed a friend’s child as her own dependant to increase her tax refund.
At the same meeting, the woman gave a new version of what she had done immediately after the encounter with Mr. Strauss-Kahn.
In testimony before the grand jury in May, she said she had fled Suite 2806 to an area in the main hallway and waited until she saw Mr. Strauss-Kahn leave in an elevator. She has said that her supervisor arrived a short time later, and that she told her supervisor what had happened.
On Tuesday, the well-placed official said, she told investigators new details, stating, “I forgot to tell you this.”
In fact, she said, she left Mr. Strauss-Kahn’s room and entered another room — her lawyer said it was Suite 2820 — and cleaned it, and then returned to Suite 2806 and cleaned it until her supervisor arrived.
“She did not know what to do,” her lawyer said. “She did not want to lose her job. She knew that her supervisor was going to be coming upstairs momentarily. So, she went into another room.”
And yet, even this version was not corroborated by card-key data obtained by investigators on Friday, which indicated that the housekeeper went to the other room only after she had finished Mr. Strauss-Kahn’s room.
Some within the district attorney’s office suggested that the rush to bring the case to a grand jury may have contributed to its current, weakened state.
Early on, there appeared to be disagreement in the office over how to proceed — whether to agree to a bail package for Mr. Strauss-Kahn and take more time to investigate before seeking his indictment, or whether to try to keep him locked up and quickly take the case to the grand jury for an indictment, according to three people involved in the case.
The office chose to seek a quick indictment, but a Manhattan judge let Mr. Strauss-Kahn out on bail anyway.
Mr. Thompson said that the housekeeper’s account of what took place in Suite 2806 is the only one that matters, and said that in the jail recording, she recounted a version of the encounter that matched what she had told the police.
“It’s a fact that the victim here has made some mistakes, but that doesn’t mean she’s not a rape victim,” Mr. Thompson said Friday.
The woman has been crushed that her inconsistent statements have been brought to light, Mr. Thompson said. “I will go to my grave knowing what this man did to me,” she told him on Friday, he said.
This story originally appeared in The New York Times
 
Did the Twenty-eight hours after a housekeeper at the Sofitel New York said she was sexually assaulted by Dominique Strauss-Kahn, she spoke by phone to a boyfriend in an immigration jail in Arizona? 
A. TRUE
B. FALSE   
 
Did the woman has been crushed that her inconsistent statements have been brought to light, Mr. Thompson said. “I will go to my grave knowing what this man did to me,” she told him on Friday, he said? 
A. TRUE
B. FALSE    

English Lessons

DIRECTIONS: Read the following and answer all the questions?
http://www.americanenglishconversation.com/
http://www.freeenglishconversation.blogspot.com/
http://www.grammar-help.blogspot.com/
  
http://freeenglishlessons-denise.blogspot.com/ 
Newspaper publisher the New York Times sold more than half its 17 percent stake in the company that owns the Boston Red Sox, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission Friday.
Three separate buyers, whose names have not been disclosed, together paid $117 million in cash for 390 of its 700 shares in Fenway Sports Group. The New York Times [NYT  8.71    -0.01  (-0.11%)   ] is looking for buyers of the remaining shares.
The sale is one the company has been trying to make since 2008, when revenue at its core newspaper businesses took a hit, jeopardizing its ability to manage its debt.
The sale will be reflected as a pretax gain of about $64 million in its third quarter. Web-hosting company Go Daddy Group announced on Friday it is being bought by a private equity consortium led by KKR and Silver Lake.
The private equity buyers, which also include Technology Crossover ventures, wouldn't say how much the deal is worth but a person close to the situation said it's about $2.25 billion. About half of that amount is debt, the Wall Street Journal reported.
"We are partnering with KKR, Silver Lake and TCV because of their technology expertise, their understanding of Web based businesses and because their values align with ours," Go Daddy CEO and founder Bob Parsons said in a statement. "We believe, together, we will take the company to the next level, especially when it comes to accelerating international growth."
Go Daddy filed to go public in 2006, but withdrew its IPO due to poor market conditions.
Qatalyst Partners served as the exclusive advisor to Go Daddy in connection with the transaction.
Barclays Capital, Deutsche Bank Securities and RBC Capital Markets acted as financial advisors and, along with KKR Capital Markets, they or their affiliates provided financing commitments for the transaction.

Newspaper publisher the New York Times sold more than half its 17 percent stake in the company that owns the Boston Red Sox, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission Friday?
A. TRUE
B. FALSE  

Go Daddy filed to go public in 2006, but withdrew its IPO due to poor market conditions? 
A. TRUE
B. FALSE