Violence and Protest in Iran as Currency Drops in Value - New York Times [getdailynow.blogspot.com]
Question by Igor: What songs about "cleaning up the house" can I teach to 3 year old children? I'm looking for simple songs about "cleaning up the house" or about "helping your family clean up the house" that I can teach to 3 year olds. I found the song, "Cleaning Up the House" on the internet. It's from The Bear in the Big Blue House, but I can't find a website which allows me to listen to it. Please post your ideas. Thank you very much! Best answer for What songs about "cleaning up the house" can I teach to 3 year old children?:
Answer by Jesse
look at some cartoons I remember jimmy neutron had this one about cleaning up his room
Answer by M
i dont know if it's what you're looking for, but a spoonful of sugar from mary poppins.
Answer by 007.5
i think (i will probably get flak from this), but the song "everybody pick up" by barney (the dinosaur). I dont know the exact name, but that on a yahoo search should get it.
Answer by AgentPickles
Clean up, clean up, everybody everywhere! Clean up, clean up, everybody do your share!
Answer by Wendy
This is the way we clean the house, clean the house, clean the house, This is the way we clean the house, early in the morning. There are heaps of other great songs, poems, games, and crafts for preschoolers in an ebook called ABC Ideas and Activities. It can be found at http://early-learning.org/index.html
Answer by Ïá´Î±É"É á´á´'ÆÆÔ'צ
The song clean up by barney :]

European Pressphoto Agency
Riot police clashed with money changers in Tehran on Wednesday.
TEHRAN â" Clashes erupted in the center of the Iranian capital on Wednesday between money changers and security forces after riot police on motorcycles used batons and tear gas to shut down a long-tolerated black-market for foreign currency, witnesses reported.
It was the first instance of a violent intervention over the money-changing business in Tehran since the national currency, the rial, which has been gradually losing value in recent years, dropped drastically over the past week, losing 40 percent of its worth against the dollar, to a record low. Economists have called the rialâs plunge a stark reflection of the economic pain in Iran caused in part by the Western sanctions on Iranâs disputed nuclear program.
Witnesses in and around Manoucheri Street, where the black-market money changers do business, described cat-and-mouse chases between motorized riot police and money changers. It was unclear whether there were injuries or arrests. It also was unclear whether the clashes had been confined to the immediate area or had spread.
The violence came a day after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in a nationally televised news conference, asked Iranian citizens not to sell their rials for other currencies, suggesting the problem had been caused in part by speculators.
Mr. Ahmadinejad also warned that a âband of 22 peopleâ with the power to manipulate exchange rates could face arrest, and he accused the United States and unspecified âdomestic alliesâ of waging a psychological war on the country.
As the clashes erupted on Wednesday, garment and jewelry merchants in the cityâs main bazaar, less than a mile away, closed their shops, apparently in protest. The semiofficial Mehr news agency said the bazaar, the heart of Tehranâs commercial center, had been closed for âsecurity reasons.â
The secretary-general of the Tehran Bazaar and Trade Union, a powerful official close to the government, accused unspecified outside instigators of pressuring  bazaar merchants to close their shops. The official, Ahmad Karimi Esfahani, was quoted by the Iranian Labor News Agency as saying that most merchants had wanted to remain open for business. âThose now present are trying to show the bazaar as closed,â he was quoted as saying. âThey are guided by foreigners.â
Other bazaar traders hinted that the closure of the bazaar was organized by powerful opponents of Mr. Ahmadinejad, who were trying to make him look weak by closing down Tehranâs most popular shopping center.
Members of Parliament and Shiite Muslim clerics have been calling for an end to the black-market currency trade, accusing the money changers of driving down the rialâs value. Others have called upon the government to buy up rials and sell dollars and other foreign currencies warehoused in the central bankâs reserves to restore stability to the national currency.
In the last weeks, traders and regular citizens had gathered by the hundreds on Manoucheri Street in Tehran to buy foreign currencies in anticipation of further weakening in the rial.
During the past months some Iranian leaders and clerics have warned against social unrest over the worsening economic malaise in the country. The fall in the currencyâs value has presented Iran with enormous economic risks, including the possibility of starting a severe bout of inflation, which is already high. A rising sense of economic crisis in Iran could also pose new political challenges for the countryâs leaders.

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