Short hair styles are not just the 'new' look. They represent a broad variety of choices and how a particular style will look on you isn't always easy to know. A good place to start is our gallery, where we have over 150 photos of models featuring short hairstyles. Once you've found a few styles you like, you can give yourself a virtual makeover to be sure you've found the right one for you.
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
Short Hair Styles
Short hair styles are not just the 'new' look. They represent a broad variety of choices and how a particular style will look on you isn't always easy to know. A good place to start is our gallery, where we have over 150 photos of models featuring short hairstyles. Once you've found a few styles you like, you can give yourself a virtual makeover to be sure you've found the right one for you.
Short Curly
Short curly hairstyles are a great way to make the most of the summer months – most of these haircuts are also easily transitioned into the winter and fall months. Blonde curly hair is one of the most popular styles that can be seen on the runways and in the pages of your favorite fashion magazines that demonstrate up and coming styles.
Binay briefs new staff, scraps ‘flexi-time’
MANILA, Philippines – On his first day in a new office, Vice President Jejomar Binay assembled his new staff and immediately ordered a house cleanup and scrapped the system of flexible work hours to synchronize work time.
Binay hit the ground running and told his staff of his management style – running a government office as if he were in the private sector.
In an exchange filled with both light banter and serious talk, the former Makati City mayor also told his new staff of moving on from the mentality that the Vice President was a spare tire.
“I'm the number two man in the executive department. Our only difference with the President is that he has regular departments. That's the only thing we don't have but we are in an executive position,” Binay said.
Binay also asked his staff to start going to work at the usual government time from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. He was surprised to learn that the roughly 100-member staff went to work at different times under a so-called "flexi-time" arrangement where some employees come in at 7 a.m., others at 8 a.m. and the rest at 9 a.m.
Source: Inquirer
Binay hit the ground running and told his staff of his management style – running a government office as if he were in the private sector.
In an exchange filled with both light banter and serious talk, the former Makati City mayor also told his new staff of moving on from the mentality that the Vice President was a spare tire.
“I'm the number two man in the executive department. Our only difference with the President is that he has regular departments. That's the only thing we don't have but we are in an executive position,” Binay said.
Binay also asked his staff to start going to work at the usual government time from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. He was surprised to learn that the roughly 100-member staff went to work at different times under a so-called "flexi-time" arrangement where some employees come in at 7 a.m., others at 8 a.m. and the rest at 9 a.m.
Source: Inquirer
Mongolia coal railway to connect with Russia
ULAN BATOR, Mongolia (AP) – Mongolian lawmakers have approved plans for a rail line linking with Russia to help tap large coal deposits in the south, the latest move in the long-delayed project that could make the poor but mineral-rich nation less dependent on exporting to China.
The landlocked country of 2.7 million people is trying to retain more of its natural wealth from its huge mineral deposits, including copper, gold and coal. Plans to expand output and open new mines have stalled as the government struggles to re-negotiate terms on mining concessions with big foreign companies.
The huge Tavan Tolgoi coking coal deposit in the south Gobi region, estimated to have more than 6 billion tons of coal, has attracted interest from 10 international mining companies including China's Shenhua Energy, a Russian consortium led by Gazprom, and Australia's BHP Billiton.
Lawmakers on Thursday voted nearly unanimously in favor of building the line and making it broad gauge, refering to the distance between the rails, so it could link up with Russia's rail network. There were concerns that if the rail were standard gauge like China's rail system, too much of the commodity would end up flowing to coal-hungry China at bargain prices. China currently takes about two thirds of Mongolia's exports.
The deposits are located only about 200 kilometers (124 miles) from the Chinese border but Transportation Minister Battulga Khaltmaa said Mongolia would rather sell processed coal to Japan and South Korea. "The policy will greatly boost the economic development of Mongolia. Instead of shipping raw materials directly to one market, jobs and value-added production will be created in Mongolia,'' he said.
The 1,100 kilometer (683.54 mile) railway will connect Tavan Tolgoi to the Russian border, the minister said. The country will invite international bidding for the railway's construction, which is expected to be completed in two years.
Tavan Tolgoi was discovered in the 1950s, when Mongolia was a Soviet satellite. The country made a peaceful transition to democracy in the early 1990s.
Source: MB
The landlocked country of 2.7 million people is trying to retain more of its natural wealth from its huge mineral deposits, including copper, gold and coal. Plans to expand output and open new mines have stalled as the government struggles to re-negotiate terms on mining concessions with big foreign companies.
The huge Tavan Tolgoi coking coal deposit in the south Gobi region, estimated to have more than 6 billion tons of coal, has attracted interest from 10 international mining companies including China's Shenhua Energy, a Russian consortium led by Gazprom, and Australia's BHP Billiton.
Lawmakers on Thursday voted nearly unanimously in favor of building the line and making it broad gauge, refering to the distance between the rails, so it could link up with Russia's rail network. There were concerns that if the rail were standard gauge like China's rail system, too much of the commodity would end up flowing to coal-hungry China at bargain prices. China currently takes about two thirds of Mongolia's exports.
The deposits are located only about 200 kilometers (124 miles) from the Chinese border but Transportation Minister Battulga Khaltmaa said Mongolia would rather sell processed coal to Japan and South Korea. "The policy will greatly boost the economic development of Mongolia. Instead of shipping raw materials directly to one market, jobs and value-added production will be created in Mongolia,'' he said.
The 1,100 kilometer (683.54 mile) railway will connect Tavan Tolgoi to the Russian border, the minister said. The country will invite international bidding for the railway's construction, which is expected to be completed in two years.
Tavan Tolgoi was discovered in the 1950s, when Mongolia was a Soviet satellite. The country made a peaceful transition to democracy in the early 1990s.
Source: MB
Emo poem from tessa
tessa is a friend of mine, and she write good poems, here is one of her poems, hope you love it.
Just a Dream
I cried and cried so many nights
When i woke up I saw you here
It was 6 a.m.
We were in the freezing cold
A snowflake fell on my nose
I reached out for you, but could not feel you
Then pressed my self against you
I fell flat on my face
I looked up and saw you
When I spoke to you you did not speak back
What was happening here?
Was I all just imaginging this?
My eyes started to sting
The tears came soon after
I got up from the groung and very soon...
I woke up
How could I be so stupid?
You said you never wanted to see me again
But the only that was real in that dream were the tears that poored from my eyes.
Just a Dream
I cried and cried so many nights
When i woke up I saw you here
It was 6 a.m.
We were in the freezing cold
A snowflake fell on my nose
I reached out for you, but could not feel you
Then pressed my self against you
I fell flat on my face
I looked up and saw you
When I spoke to you you did not speak back
What was happening here?
Was I all just imaginging this?
My eyes started to sting
The tears came soon after
I got up from the groung and very soon...
I woke up
How could I be so stupid?
You said you never wanted to see me again
But the only that was real in that dream were the tears that poored from my eyes.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)