Mug for sale

Hello guys, today i would like to offer you customize mug, well it is very good for you let say if you have a restaurant company that needs to put your logo in your mug well you come to the right place which is here...

Minimum order is 20 mug

For price i would give you $ 3/for each mug.

For freight or shipping cost is excluded.
  


How:
1.Send you logo or any picture that you desire to put it in your mug by email to kemangkid@gmail.com

2. Then we will reply by an email to confirm your pictures

3. Wait until the product is finish

For more information you can email me kemangkid@gmail.com 
or
in facebook
jaricompany@gmail.com


Thank you...

Polo shirt for sale

Hello guys, today i'm gonna sell some polo shirt which the design look a like football jersey clothes
for example like picture i show below

So if you like to buy this polo shirt you can change the number and name that will put in back of the polo shirt.

Contact me for more information :

kemangkid @gmail.com
or in facebook
jaricompany@gmail.com 

List of Countries based on Corruption


 
 
These are list of countries based corruption
Each criterion is rated on a qualitative scale from 1 (worst) to 10 (best)
 

Those countries with the least corruption are: 
• Australia (10) unchanged
• Canada (10) unchanged
 • United States (9) unchanged
 •Chile (8) unchanged 

Those with the greatest incidence of corruption are: 

• Kazakhstan (1) unchanged
 • Russia (1) unchanged
 • D.R. Congo (2) unchanged
 • South Africa (2) unchanged
• Papua New Guinea (2) unchanged
• Mongolia (2) unchanged
• China (2) unchanged

Based on the Behre Dolbear Group Inc

Singapore

 

History

Inhabitants of the Malaysian peninsula and the island of Singapore first migrated to the area between 2500 and 1500 B.C. (see Malaysia). British and Dutch interest in the region grew with the spice trade, and the trading post of Singapore was founded in 1819 by Sir Stamford Raffles. It was made a separate Crown colony of Britain in 1946, when the former colony of the Straits Settlements was dissolved. The other two settlements on the peninsula—Penang and Malacca—became part of the Union of Malaya, and the small island of Labuan was transferred to North Borneo. The Cocos (or Keeling) Islands and Christmas Island were transferred to Australia in 1955 and in 1958, respectively.
Singapore attained full internal self-government in 1959, and Lee Kwan Yew, an economic visionary with an authoritarian streak, took the helm as prime minister. On Sept. 16, 1963, Singapore joined Malaya, Sabah (North Borneo), and Sarawak in the Federation of Malaysia. It withdrew from the federation on Aug. 9, 1965, and a month later proclaimed itself a republic.
Under Lee, Singapore developed into one of the cleanest, safest, and most economically prosperous cities in Asia. However, Singapore's strict rules of civil obedience also drew criticism from those who said the nation's prosperity was achieved at the expense of individual freedoms.
S. R. Nathan was declared president without an election when he was certified as the only candidate eligible to run in 1999 elections. In Aug. 2004, Lee Hsien Loong became the country's third prime minister since Singapore gained independence from Britain in 1965. Lee faced his first electoral challenge in May 2006. His People's Action Party (PAP) won 82 out of 84 seats in parliamentary elections.
In Singapore's May 2011 general election, the ruling People's Action Party was reelected with a majority of 81 to 6, which was the equivalent of 60% of the vote. This percentage was viewed as promising by the opposition, as it was significantly less than in the two previous elections. After the elections, prime minister Lee Hsien Loong uncharacteristically acknowledged mistakes and pledged a more efficient government in the future.
Following on the heels of the general election, August's presidential election saw a field of four candidates from which the ruling party's Tony Tan emerged victorious. Though favored to win, Tan's triumph was not exactly a landslide--the 7,000 vote margin was the equivalent of 35.2% of the vote.

See also Encyclopedia: Singapore
U.S. State Dept. Country Notes: Singapore.
Department of Statistics www.singstat.gov.sg/ .



Facts about Pisa Tower


  • The Leaning Tower of Pisa located Pisa, Tuscany, Italy. It was first constructed in 1174, and then abandoned for 90 years because it started to lean. 
 
  • The Leaning Tower of Pisa is a freestanding bell tower located the Italian city of Pisa. It is located behind the Cathedral and is among the oldest structure in Pisa's Cathedral Square.
  • The leaning Tower of Pisa is located behind the Cathedral complex called the Piazza dei Miracoli meaning Field of Miracles. This building usually stirs the imagination of ever person who comes across it, both young and old.
  • The tower of Pisa is leaning to one side because the location where the tower was built has very soft soil which resulted in the tower, which had a mere 3 metre deep foundation, tilting to a one side. The tower of Pisa has 207 columns ranged around eight stories.
  • It is a tall bell tower of the cathedral in Pisa (Italy). The tower is located at the back of the Cathedral and it is the third oldest building in Piazza del Duomo. It follows the Cathedral and the Baptistery with a height of 55.86 m.
  • The leaning tower of Pisa was constructed with limestone and lime mortar. The exterior part of the tower is covered using marble. The tower located in Pisa, Italy, and it is famous just because it leans. It was however closed to the public in 1990 due to fears that it might fall. 
 (BONANNO PISANO)
  • It is considered that the architects and engineers who designed the leaning Tower of Pisa are: Bonanno Pisano, Gherardo di Gherardo, Giovanni Pisano, Giovanni di Simone The first phase of Pisa Tower's construction is attributed to Bonanno Pisano or Gherardo di Gherardo.
    Giovanni Pisano and Giovanni di Simone continued the second phase of the building. Tommaso Pisano finished the tower's construction.



     

Eiffel Tower History



 (Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel)

In 1889, Paris hosted an Exposition Universelle (World’s Fair) to mark the 100-year anniversary of the French Revolution. More than 100 artists submitted competing plans for a monument to be built on the Champ-de-Mars, located in central Paris, and serve as the exposition’s entrance. The commission was granted to Eiffel et Compagnie, a consulting and construction firm owned by the acclaimed bridge builder, architect and metals expert Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel. While Eiffel himself often receives full credit for the monument that bears his name, it was one of his employees—a structural engineer named Maurice Koechlin—who came up with and fine-tuned the concept. Several years earlier, the pair had collaborated on the Statue of Liberty’s metal armature.

  (Maurice Koechlin)

Eiffel reportedly rejected Koechlin’s original plan for the tower, instructing him to add more ornate flourishes. The final design called for more than 18,000 pieces of puddle iron, a type of wrought iron used in construction, and 2.5 million rivets. Several hundred workers spent two years assembling the framework of the iconic lattice tower, which at its inauguration in March 1889 stood nearly 10,000 feet high and was the tallest structure in the world—a distinction it held until the completion of New York City’s Chrysler Building in 1930. (In 1957, an antenna was added that increased the structure’s height by 65 feet, making it taller than the Chrysler Building but not the Empire State Building, which had surpassed its neighbor in 1931.) Initially, only the Eiffel Tower’s second-floor platform was open to the public; later, all three levels, two of which now feature restaurants, would be reachable by stairway or one of eight elevators.
( Source:http://www.history.com/topics/eiffel-tower )


Indonesia

1. The oldest hominid in the world, Pithecanthropus Erectus, is found in Indonesia. Its origin is dated way back from 1.8 million years ago.

2. 20% of liquid natural gas in the world is produced in Indonesia and [Indonesia] is the largest supplier worldwide.
Indonesia is a major producer of cloves and nutmeg and ranked first in the world in terms of production.
Indonesia is the largest exporter of plywood, which makes up 80% of the supply to the world.
Percentage of World Mangrove Area by Country, 2005
3. Indonesia is the world’s richest in term of most extensive coral reefs. It has about 18% of the total coral reefs around the world.
Coral Distribution Map.
4. Indonesia has the largest number of shark species, which is approximately 150 species.
Shark species in Indonesia.
5. Indonesia has the world’s largest amount of orchid biodiversity. There are about six thousand species of orchids, ranging from the largest (Tiger Orchid or Grammatophyllum Speciosum) to the smallest (Taeniophyllum, which has no leaves). The collection also includes the Black Orchid, which is extremely rare and can only be found in Papua.
black-orchid
6. Indonesia has the largest mangrove forest in the world. The main benefit of mangroves is to prevent erosion by sea water.
Mangrove distribution map.
7. Indonesia has the only living ancient dragon, Komodo, which can be located in NTT.
Komodo dragon.
8. Indonesia has the world’s largest flower called the Rafflesia Arnoldi, which has a diameter of up to 1 meter during the blossom phase.
Rafflesia Arnoldi, largest flower in the world.
9. Indonesia has the world’s smallest primate named the Tarsier Pygmy (Tarsius pumilus), also known as the Mountain Tarsier, whose length is only 10 cm. This animal looks like a monkey and lives on trees found in Sulawesi.
Tarsier Pygmy, smallest primate in the world.
10. Indonesia has the world’s longest snake called the Python Reticulates, which is 10 meters long and can be found on Sulawesi island.
Python Reticulates, world's longest snake.
11. Indonesia has the smallest fish in the world named the Paedocypris progenetica, with a length of 7.9 mm and found in a Sumatra muddy swamp.