Can Your Really Learn Spanish?
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Learning any language requires time and interest. If you want to indulge yourself into the language learning, especially Spanish, you need to chalk out your style of learning. Your style of learning is going to affect you in its best possible way to you. Most trusted method of learning is always the method you want to get involved. If you know your learning style, you will be the gainer.
To make the things on an easier note, follow these three examples of Francesca, Don and Dolores.
Classroom Approach
Sheer necessity pushes Francesca towards Spanish language learning. She is going to splurge her holiday in Mexico and this particular reason prompted her in the Spanish language learning mode. Her style of learning delivers the best when she finds herself in the midst classroom teaching method. In the classroom style method, she will be able to get the help of a teacher who is entitled to teach a group of student. Earlier, Francesca has attended many college classes but without a degree for herself. Learning Spanish language in a classroom environment is really going to help her at the end.
Teach yourself Style
If you think you can not manage time for your Spanish classes as Don thinks, you have other option open to get the taste of Spanish language. Don, who is a contractor by profession, never finds time for proper classroom training as his busy schedule does not allow him to do so. But his profusion demands constant interaction with his workers. Only one way can solve his problem, which is settle in for self teaching style.
He needs to buy Spanish language learning CD or CDs, which will help him to learn Spanish language while travelling. In this way he will manage his work and his Spanish learning,
Immersion
Language learning is fun as well as an interesting subject to be in. Grandma Dolores wants to learn Spanish to help all the immigrant children for whom she is working relentlessly and to learn the basic value of Spanish culture. Her sheer passion and interest to learn Spanish opens a new learning method for her.
Dolores can take her lesson from ‘telenovellas,’ Spanish language soap operas, available on Spanish-speaking cable or Satellite stations. One programme that will help her to get a grab over the language is ‘Destinos,’ the popular ‘telenovella. Each action played here if keenly followed, can act as a good teaching materials.
Anybody can learn Spanish provided they choose the right method of learning.
August 30, 2008 by Mabelle Pitman
Filed under Travel Tips
Scuba Diving In Key West: Sharks and Shipwrecks
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One of the most popular places for scuba diving in the US is Key West located right off the coast of Southern Florida. It is a warm water paradise that offers divers a fantastic world to explore. Divers from beginners to the experts come to Key West from all over the world. It offers some of the best diving experiences available.
Unique Experience
Scuba diving in Key West is not just another scuba diving location. It is a prime area with quality diving for all. It is a diving experience for those who are seeking more than an average diving experience. It is for those divers who enjoy, mystery, and more daring on their diving expeditions.
The diving in the key west is not your average experience, it is varied and provides something extra for every diver
Key West is known for its sharks. The experience of swimming in an area known for its sharks is not for everyone. All types of sharks have been seen including the well-known man-eater, the great white, which was made famous in the Jaws movies.
Some diving trips offer the chance to be submerged with the sharks inside a protective metal cage. Other options allow actual swimming with the sharks which wearing chain mail suit similar to king Arthur’s knights of the round table wore in battle.
As well as active sea and marine life in the area, it also offers the chance to esplore a lot of famous and fantastic ship wrecks. One of the most popular wrecks is a US Airforce missile tracking ship, this unique ship has three thirty 40 foot radar dishes, two dome-like tracking structures, rocket launchers, and a complete weather station.
The US Airforce ship was decommissioned it in 1983. It is commonly visited place by divers seeking more thrills than a normal dive trip.
Scuba Diving in Key West, Florida is a fun, and great place to in the world because of the warm waters, unique marine life, and interesting ship wrecks.
It is a diver?s paradise for thrills and adventure. So if you enjoy a challenge and a new view of the world, than you should be packing to head to the warm friendly waters of key west, keeping in mind that the sharks were there before you, so let them do there thing
August 30, 2008 by Paul De Vizard
Filed under Travel Tips
Low Travel With M.O.R. Vacations!
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Is travel only for the rich? Of course not! We live in the day and age wherein taking breaks and vacations are a must. We do need a break from so-called life at least once a year, or else we go loco.
Because of this greater need for more vacations today, don’t you think there is a need for a massive discount on travel rates? A massive discount on more vacations’ fares and accommodation rates? Do you think all that is too much to ask?
We beg to disagree!
We at M.O.R. Vacations would like to tell you a scandalous non-secret. We are offering membership fees for as low as $498, if you sign up with us before August 31st, 2008.
If you find that deal scandalous, how about if I tell you that we are allowing financing plans that would let you pay for these memberships on installment basis? How about 100% financing for those who have FICO scores of 449 and up?
M.O.R. Vacations not only allows you to travel at unbelievable discount rates, but it would also allow you to earn through referrals! Talk about letting travel pay for itself!
Our membership fees are set lower so you could invite more members and referrals who would return time and again.. To refer more people!
Do you see it now? People lining up to buy memberships off you, because you’re offering memberships for discounted travel at an obscenely lower price?! The price point is what makes this M.O.R. Vacations travel network option more attractive to prospects!
Enjoy more vacations at M.O.R. Vacations’ value-packed price point! Sign up with M.O.R. Vacations today!
August 30, 2008 by Matt Willis
Filed under Travel Tips
Are there Certain Items a Moving Company Won’t Transport?
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Moving can be such a daunting task, especially when you have a lot of belongings. You pack them up, the movers come get them, the movers move those items to your new home, and then you have to unpack the very things you had just packed. If there was only a better way, right? Well, until the technology for “packing robots” is developed, this is the only way in which packing is going to be done. But how about those things that the movers won’t move? What do you do with those things? Most of all, what items will they not move? These are great questions because some individuals are not prepared for the answers.
What they won’t move
Residential movers are pretty good about moving your belongings to your new home. However, there are some things you need to know before you start scrambling for the boxes and tape. Those things are what they won’t move. Those things are:
- Pets – If you have pets, you need to make arrangements to move them. Hopefully you’re not taping them up in boxes for the movers to move them. However, it is a federal regulation that prohibits them from being able to transport animals in their vans. That is why you must place your pet in a cage or carrier in your car and move your pet yourself.
- Plants – Not moving live plants is another thing that is federally regulated. There is an exception, though. That exception is if your destination is within 150 miles. If so, they can move them. Then again, you have to check with the movers and their individual policies.
- Flammable items – Moving companies cannot move anything flammable or combustible. That means you have to ensure that oil and gasoline are removed from lawn mowers, weed eaters, and other power equipment. They also cannot transport any type of fuel such as propane tanks, tiki torch oil, or gas cans.
- Hazardous chemicals – If you have pesticides or other items that can be considered hazardous, they are not able to move that either. Fertilizers and the such must not be placed within a moving van. This includes anything that is toxic. You must find another way to transport these items.
Not transporting these items are both for the safety of the moving company and to protect your belongings when their inside of the moving van. It is quite understandable why you do not want flammable items in the van with your clothing and your furniture. It is also understandable why you do not want your pet in the back of the van either. The environment is unsafe for your furry friend.
Things to note
Also make a note that transporting personal items should be done by you. This is in reference to essentials such as a change of clothes, medications, and toiletries if you are moving long distance or moving international. You also want to keep your valuables such as jewelry and family heirlooms with you. That way you know that they are safe by being able to keep track of them at all times.
You also need to read the small print in the agreement that is given to you by the moving company. Make sure you read everything that is given to you so that you know the restrictions and can accommodate those restrictions before moving day. That way you are prepared and you’re not running around looking for a solution that is probably packed away in an unknown box in the back of the moving truck.
August 30, 2008 by Amy Nutt
Filed under Travel Tips
Travel Insurance Civ
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Whether you’re travelling internationally or domestically, travel insurance is an important but often overlooked part of your vacation, a quick and simple way of being covered for unforeseen costs.
Travel insurance is designed to protect you from things that can spoil your trip: sickness, losing your baggage and belongings, a cancelled or delayed flight, getting sued overseas, or, in extreme situations, death. Travel insurance is provided for both individual persons and groups of persons and is one of the most variable kinds of insurance available in terms of price and cover.
There are numerous circumstances that could force you to cancel your trip, return home early or cause you to seek emergency medical treatment while travelling. Medical travel insurance is by far the most important aspect to be considered if travelling abroad. In some countries medical costs are so high that even a doctor’s check-up can run into several hundreds of dollars.
In some countries medical costs are so high that even a doctor’s check-up can run into several hundreds of dollars. In serious cases travel insurance will cover issues such as ‘repatriation’ which involves flying a patient back to their home country for medical care. Numerous circumstances can crop up that could force you to cancel your trip, return home early or cause you to seek emergency medical treatment while travelling. Medical travel insurance is by far the most important aspect to be considered if travelling abroad. In case of death, medical travel insurance will arrange for a victim’s body to be returned to its homeland and family. These examples are dire but without travel insurance to cover you, you could end up spending yourself (and possibly your extended family too) hundreds of thousands of dollars.
In some countries medical costs are so high that even a check up at the doctors can run into several hundreds of dollars. In serious cases travel insurance will cover issues such as ‘repatriation’ which involves flying a patient back to their home country for medical care. In case of death, medical travel insurance will arrange for a victim’s body to be returned to its homeland and family. These examples are dire but without travel insurance to cover you, you could end up spending yourself (and possibly your extended family too) hundreds of thousands of dollars.
If travelling (whether on work or vacation), do yourself a favour and familiarise yourself with the prospect of travel insurance. Taking one step at a time means you can avoid wasting money and being informed means you can avoid losing money.
August 30, 2008 by Roc Selly
Filed under Travel Tips
Airport In Orlando
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There are a number of ways to get from the Orlando airport to the destination of your choice. The airport is located only three miles from downtown, so you should be there in about 40 minutes. You can take a taxi there for roughly $35 dollars, shuttle for about half that price, or hop on one of the Lynx buses for a mere $1.50. There are also Lynx buses that run to International Drive and Apopka. If you have hotel reservations, then most hotels offer a complimentary shuttle service from the airport to the hotel.
If you are trying to directly to Disney World, then the Disney World Resort offers its guests a private coach directly there. Booking ahead allows you to bypass baggage claim; you can have your bags brought directly to the resort. For those who aren’t staying at the resort, a taxi ride from the airport to Disney World will cost you close to sixty dollars, or you can take a direct shuttle. All the shuttles are charged per person, with a cheaper rate for a round trip ticket. Shuttles are offered to International Drive, Port Canaveral, Lake Buena Vista, Winter Park/Maitland, and Kissimmee and to the Airport Hotels.
Limousines are also an option, although they charge by the hour. The recommended way to travel to and from the airport, however, is through a rented car as you will then be able to have your own private vehicle for the duration of your stay in Orlando. Renting a car is easy as Orlando has lots of car rental agencies, both major and local. In the airport grounds alone, there are at least six rental agencies where you can get a car. Finally, for those of you who want to get out of the Orlando area directly, shuttle services are available that will take you to several key points in Florida.
August 30, 2008 by Jon Stevens
Filed under Travel Tips
What is Your Opinion on Alaska Tours?
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If you are looking to go on a family adventure but you do not want to travel too far, then Alaska may just be the best place for you. It is by far one of the most scenic states in America and thousands of tourists head there each year for its family friendly adventure activities.
Basically adventure holidays include anything that you would not usually do. It has to be something exciting and that will vary from individual to individual. It could be that you find sightseeing in a new country exciting, or perhaps you need to do something extreme such as bungee jumping? Whatever it is that you think would be an adventure, can be done in Alaska.
Why Not Try the Alaskan Grizzly Bear Adventure?
One particular adventure that can be experienced in Alaska is the “Alaskan Grizzly Bear Adventure”. Basically this involves watching some of the 30,000 grizzly bears that are found in Alaska. The grizzly bear has come a long way since the 1800’s when it was almost driven into extinction. Now Alaska currently has the largest population of the Grizzly bear and they are absolutely beautiful to watch.
However, if you do choose to go and lookout for grizzly bears then ensure that you do not go alone or even with the family. Whilst grizzly bears are beautiful, they are also incredibly dangerous and so you should only ever go to watch them with a guide. You can find both boat trips and small plane trips that can take you to see the bears and it really will provide you with a truly memorable experience. The children will love seeing the bears from the plane or the boat and it will give them something to talk about for the rest of the year.
Other Activities You Can Experience
If grizzly bear watching is not an activity that you want to partake in, then there are many other activities that you can try out. Camping is always a good family activity and so is fishing and hiking. Some people also love to try their hand at whitewater rafting too and the rush from that can be extremely thrilling. For any of these activities, make sure you have either a map or a guide so you don’t get lost.
Overall taking adventure tours in Alaska can help you to have the most memorable vacation that you have ever had. If you want to see what Alaska is really like before you actually decide upon a vacation there then it may be worth asking other people’s opinion if they have visited the State. They will be able to tell you all of the secrets that the state has to offer such as secret hideaway spots or secret activities which not many other people know about.
August 30, 2008 by Peter Mason
Filed under Travel Tips
Travel Insurance Bvii
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Travel insurance is designed to cover you when things go wrong and problems arise during your travels. Travel insurance is not so much an optional extra as an integral part of any break. Travel Insurance is just as essential as your sunglasses, toiletries and camera when you’re heading off on holiday. Travel insurance is a way to offer yourself peace of mind and minimise the considerable financial risks of travelling. Travel insurance is insurance that is intended to cover your medical expenses, financial losses (such as money invested in non-refundable pre-payments), and other losses incurred while travelling, either within your own country, or in other countries. Travel insurance is priced as a percentage of trip costs, and typically ranges from 4 to 8%.
Travel insurance for a couple will be cheaper than for two single adults, and cover for a family with children under 18 is not usually much more expensive than cover for a couple. Your insurance provider will adjust your travel insurance policy in compliance with your requests and potential risks you might face during your trip. Insurance brokers have contacts with a wide range of travel insurance companies and might be able to assist you in finding the appropriate travel insurance. Insurance policies and their provisions usually become valid as of the moment of payment which means that you can buy your policy online at the last minute, for instance, at the airport before you board your flight.
Some things you may not know about travel insurance include the fact that an insurance air travel policy covers you in your plane is involved in an accident, no matter what financial state the airline is in. There are also regular travel insurance companies out there that will insure you for adrenaline sports such as skiing and bungee jumping at very competitive rates.
Bearing in mind that most sections of your policy have limits on the amount the insurer will pay under that section, you can use travel insurance as the ultimate tool to prepare for the unexpected on a trip abroad.
Travel insurance is not so much an optional extra as an integral part of any break. It is just as essential as your sunglasses, suncream and camera when you’re heading off on holiday. As a way to offer yourself peace of mind, buying travel insurance can also minimise the considerable financial risks of travelling. Travel insurance is insurance that is intended to cover your medical expenses, financial losses (such as money invested in non-refundable pre-payments), and other losses incurred while travelling, either within your own country, or in other countries. Travel insurance is priced as a percentage of trip costs, and typically ranges from 4 to 8%.
August 30, 2008 by Roc Selly
Filed under Travel Tips
Used Office Furniture: The Needs of Office Furniture
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A professional person needs an office that will help that person reach the maximum level of efficiency. The best office furniture available will help reach this goal. Every aspect of the office will lift the person’s work success higher, from the comfort of the chair to the usefulness of the desk.
The desk chair is a key to getting the work done. If the chair is not the most comfortable and convenient chair, the work will suffer. The ability to sit in the chair for eight hours straight is the most important part of creating the perfect office.
A professional yet economical office is the best for the person who works from home. This office needs a chair with sturdy armrests and the capability of movement. The smaller desks, which have multiple sections, is the best choice of the in-home office.
People who work from home need these two characteristics because they multitask more than those who work in office buildings. Working and taking care of the children should be rewarded by the most comfortable chair available. The armrests too play a part in the multitasking as they are a place for the children to touch to feel connected to the work.
To keep the office space to a minimum, to not completely take over the home, the desk needs multiple sections. These spaces are available for filing, to-do lists and the hidden snacks needed to bribe the children. To understand why these sections are important one only has to work from home one day to know the children will seek attention while you are working.
Office building environments have popularized the cubicle. The thought of people not wanting to spend their lives in a cubicle has been a long standing joke. Since then, cubicles have come a long way.
The cubicle is no longer just three half-sized walls made of felt that might fall over if the window is opened on a windy day. Cubicles now resemble solitary desks with wooden walls with many different levels of height. The space saving of having cubicles allows the employees to grow in number allowing them to not be overwhelmed with their workload.
An employee’s efficiency and production is directly affected by the comfort level of their office. In looking for comfort, an employee will get distracted from their work if they do not find their office comfortable. The chair in the office must meet ergonomic requirements.
The height, softness and movement of an office chair are extremely important to the ergonomics of the human body. If the office chair is too high or too low, the employee will not be able to work for very long due to stretching to reach the keyboard. If the chair is not soft and movable, the employee will need to stand much sooner than their normal eight hours.
Many reoccurring injuries caused by physical fatigue are caused from not having the proper office furniture. Carpal tunnel syndrome has been found to be caused by the improper placement of the keyboard. Headaches and migraines have been caused by straining to look at a monitor that is not in the right place all day.
Work suffers from unhappy employees. If the office furniture does not create an environment of efficiency then the work will not get done. If the employee feels comfortable then the work will get done quickly, efficiently and happily.
Short History of Swimsuits and Bikinis
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Sixty years ago this week, the world’s first bikinis made their debut at a poolside fashion show in France. This particular swimsuit is now so common that it’s hard to understand how shocking people found it at the time. When bikinis arrived, its revealing cut scandalized even French fashion models who were supposed to wear it; the models refused, and the original designer had to enlist strippers! Bikinis slowly gained acceptance?first on the Riviera, then in the United States, and became a beachfront staple. When bikinis were unveiled in the late 1940s, it was not the first time that women had worn revealing garments in public. In the fourth century, for example, Roman gymnasts wore bandeau tops, bikini bottoms, and even anklets that would look perfectly at home on the beaches of California today. At the beginning of the 20th century, though, such displays would have bordered on blasphemy. Female swimmers went to great lengths to conceal themselves at the beach. They wore voluminous bathing costumes and even made use of a peculiar Victorian contraption called the bathing machine, essentially a small wooden or canvas hut on wheels. The bather entered the machine fully dressed and donned her swimming clothes inside. Then, horses pulled the cart into the surf. The bather would disembark on the seaside, where she could take a dip without being observed from the shore. In the decades that followed, the seaside dress code loosened up. In 1907, Australian swimmer and film star Annette Kellerman, an advocate of more hydrodynamic swimwear, was charged with indecent exposure for appearing on Boston’s Revere Beach in a form fitting, sleeveless tank suit. The ensuing high-profile legal battle led beaches across the nation to relax swimwear restrictions. By 1915, American women commonly wore one-piece knitted maillots.
Oddly enough, the two-piece swimsuit?which usually consisted of a structured halter top and modest bottom that covered the navel, hips, and derri?re?arrived with much less fanfare than bikinis. By the early ’40s, film stars including Ava Gardner, Rita Hayworth, and Lana Turner were all wearing two-piece swimsuits, and it was seen frequently on American beaches. Why was the skin above the bellybutton so much less controversial than below it? Hollywood’s Hays production codes allowed two-piece gowns but prohibited navels on-screen. That meant the rib cage earned a ho-hum reputation, but the bellybutton was terra incognito. In the 1948, as Kelly Killoren Bensimon details in The Bikini Book; attractive women were known as “bombshells,” and anything intense was ‘atomic.’ So, when two Frenchmen independently designed skimpier alternatives to two piece swimsuits in the summer of 1946, both suits got nicknames. The first designer, Jacques Heim, created a tiny suit called the atome. The second, Louis Reard, introduced his design on July 5, four days after the United States had begun atomic testing in the Bikini Atoll. In a rather bold marketing ploy, Reard named his creation ‘le bikini’, implying it was as momentous an invention as the atom bomb. Thanks to their provocative name and cut, bikinis made international headlines. Photos of Micheline Bernardini, the stripper Reard had enlisted to model it, circulated across the planet. But in the United States, women, including actresses in movies like 1947’s My Favorite Brunette and the model on this 1948 cover of Life magazine, stuck with more traditional two piece swimsuits. In 1950, Time interviewed American swimsuit mogul Fred Cole and reported that he had “little but scorn for France’s famed Bikinis,” because they were designed for diminutive Gallic women. “French girls have short legs,” he explained to Time. “Swimsuits have to be hiked up at the sides to make their legs look longer.”
Brigitte Bardot’s legs, at least, didn’t need any such help. A photo was taken at the Cannes Film Festival in 1953, just as the bikinis were becoming common on the French Riviera. Even so, it remained illegal in many States, where it was seen as a suspect garment favored by ‘loose moral’ Mediterranean types. A few years ago, Sports Illustrated dug up a 1957 issue of Modern Girl that declared: “It is hardly necessary to waste words over the so-called bikinis since it is inconceivable that any girl with tact and decency would ever wear such a thing.” Just three summers later, though, bikinis had established a beachhead here in the United States. This was in large part because of the increasing popularity of private pools, which gave women a secluded place to test out the new look. A Neiman Marcus buyer classified bikinis as “a big thing” for 1960. Brian Hyland also had a hit that year with the song “Itsy Bitsy, Teenie Weenie, Yellow Polka Dot Bikini,” which takes on new meaning when you realize the swimsuit was still catching on at the time. No wonder the song’s protagonist was “afraid to come out of the water.”
Bikinis soon became extremely common. In 1965, a woman told Time it was “almost square” not to wear bikinis, which, given the outlet, suggests she was correct. In 1967 the magazine wrote that “65% of the young set had already gone over.” The Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue debuted in 1964, with a white bikini on the cover. And the swimsuit’s increasing popularity was reinforced by its appearance in contemporary movies like Annette Funicello’s How To Stuff a Wild Bikini and Raquel Welch’s One Million Years B.C. One of the bikini’s earliest and most memorable film roles came in the 1962 Bond film Dr. No. (A journalist who saw an advance screening reported, “Actress Ursula Andress fills wet bikinis as if she were going downwind behind twin spinnakers.”)
Bikinis definitely certainly complemented the va-va-voomery of Raquel Welch and her peers, who tended to be busty and a little soft in the middle. (In early bikini shots, stomachs are often evidently sucked in.) But the 1970s saw the rise of models like Cheryl Tiegs, who possessed the athletic figure that, for the most part, remains in vogue today. The advent of this lean ideal led many women to wonder: Who, exactly, should wear bikinis? In the 1960s, Emily Post decreed, “It is for perfect figures only, and for the very young.” Since then, though, a number of bikini designers (most notably Malia Mills) have encouraged women of all ages and body types to take up the style. Bensimon’s lively Bikini Book splits the difference on this question. In one Q&A, the author asks venerated swimwear designer Norma Kamali who shouldn’t wear the bikini. She responds, “Anyone with a tummy.” Eighty-odd pages later, though, professional beach volleyballer Gabrielle Reece (who competes in a bikini) declares that “confidence” alone can make the bikinis sexy. Easy for her to say. Today, you have to wonder whether thong bikinis, which first appeared in Brazil in the 1970s but has since made scant inroads here, will ever become common on American beaches. Never, you say? It’s a suspect garment favored by licentious Latin types? Exactly what Americans used to think about bikinis. Whether or not the thong ever makes it out of the lingerie drawer, though, bikinis are here to stay.
August 29, 2008 by Craig Walenta
Filed under Travel Tips



