Monday, November 22, 2010

15 America's Top Cities For Finding Jobs | Unemployed workers

The jobs website Juju.com releases a monthly Job Search Difficulty Index, which measures the difficulty of finding employment in 50 major cities around the country. The Index is calculated by dividing the number of unemployed workers in each metropolitan area, as reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, by the number of jobs in Juju's index of millions of online jobs in the United States. Here are the cities that, according to that formula, are the least difficult to find a job in.

1. Washington, D.C.

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 1.11

2. San Jose, Calif.

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 1.20

3. New York, N.Y.

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 1.63

4. Baltimore, Md.

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 1.89

5. Hartford, Conn.

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 1.89

6. Boston, Mass.

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 1.97

7. Austin, Texas

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 2.25

8. Salt Lake City, Utah

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 2.37

9. Denver, Colo.

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 2.38

10. Milwaukee, Wis.

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 2.40

11. Cleveland, Ohio

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 2.45

12. San Antonio, Texas

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 2.52

13. St. Paul, Minn.

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 2.53

14. Oklahoma City, Okla.

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 2.57

15. Dallas, Texas

Unemployed individuals per advertised job: 2.61

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Carnival Costumes Ideas 2010 | Trinidad Carnival 2011



How to Make Carnival costumes are best known as an integral part of the brilliant displays of color and sound during Brazil's Rio Carnival festival every year. The costumes are famous for their over-the-top designs, minimalist coverage, time-consuming bead work, sequins and feathers. Most carnival costumes are set on a bikini base with layers of beading, glitter and feathers. The highlight of a Brazilian carnival costume is the headpiece with feathers that seem to touch the sky.

Carnival is a festive season which occurs immediately before Lent; the main events are usually. Carnival typically involves a public celebration or parade combining some elements of a circus, mask and public street party. People often dress up or masquerade during the celebrations, which mark an overturning of daily life

Carnival has been celebrated on the island of Cyprus for centuries, and the tradition is believed to have been established under Venetian rule around the 16th century







































Saturday, November 20, 2010

Jabuticaba – The Grape Tree That Fruits on its Trunk



The Jabuticaba (also called Brazilian Grape Tree, Jaboticaba, Jabotica, Guaperu, Guapuru, Hivapuru, Sabará and Ybapuru) is a fruit-bearing tree native to Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Bolivia. The fruit is purplish black, with a white pulp; it can be eaten raw or be used to make jellies(geleia) and licor de jabuticaba drinks (plain juice or wine).

The fruit tree (named jabuticabeira in Portuguese) has salmon-colored leaves when they are young, turning green posteriorly. It is a very slow growing tree which prefers moist, lightly acidic soils for best growth. It is widely adaptable, however, and grows satisfactorily even on alkaline beach-sand type soils, so long as they are tended and irrigated. Its flowers are white and grow directly from its trunk in a cauliflorous habit. Naturally the tree may flower and fruit only once or twice a year, but when continuously irrigated it flowers frequently, and fresh fruit can be available year round in tropical regions.

The jabuticaba (Myrciaria cauliflora (Mart.) O.Berg. [Myrtaceae]) is a small tree native to Minas Gerais in southeastern Brazil grown for the purple, grape-like fruits it produces. Traditionally, an astringent decoction of the sun-dried skins has been used as a treatment for hemoptysis, asthma, diarrhea, and gargled for chronic inflammation of the tonsils. The fruit is 3-4 cm in diameter with one to four large seeds, borne directly on the main trunks and branches of the plant, lending a distinctive appearance to the fruiting tree. It has a thick, purple, astringent skin that covers a sweet, white, or rosy pink gelatinous flesh. Common in Brazilian markets, jaboticabas are largely eaten fresh; their popularity has been likened to that of grapes in the US. Fresh fruit may begin to ferment 3 to 4 days after harvest, so they are often used to make jams, tarts, strong wines, and liqueurs.

Several potent antioxidant and anti-inflammatory anti-cancer compounds have been isolated from the fruit. In Brazil the fruit of several species, namely M. jaboticaba (Vell.) O.Berg, M. tenella (DC.) O.Berg, and M. trunciflora O.Berg, share the same common name.

The name is derived from the Tupi word Jabuti (tortoise) + Caba (place), meaning the place where you find tortoises.

















Moeraki Boulders



The Moeraki Boulders are unusually large and spherical boulders lying along a stretch of Koekohe Beach on the wave cut Otago coast of New Zealand between Moeraki and Hampden, and are located at 45°20′42.99″S 170°49′33.82″E / 45.345275°S 170.8260611°E / -45.345275; 170.8260611. They occur scattered either as isolated or clusters of boulders within a stretch of beach where they have been protected in a scientific reserve. The erosion by wave action of mudstone, comprising local bedrock and landslides, frequently exposes embedded isolated boulders. These boulders are grey-colored septarian concretions, which have been exhumed from the mudstone enclosing them and concentrated on the beach by coastal erosion.

Local Māori legends explained the boulders as the remains of eel baskets, calabashes, and kumara washed ashore from the wreck of an Arai-te-uru, a large sailing canoe. This legend tells of the rocky shoals that extend seaward from Shag Point as being the petrified hull of this wreck and a nearby rocky promontory as being the body of the canoe's captain. In 1848 W.B.D. Mantell sketched the beach and its boulders, more numerous than now. The picture is now in the Alexander Turnbull Library in Wellington. The boulders were described in 1850 colonial reports and numerous popular articles since that time. In more recent times they have become a popular tourist attraction, often described and pictured in numerous web pages and tourist guides.