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<td align="center" style="font: 11px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">If you would like to remove yourself from the Clever Grip list, <a href="http://www.lavvel.work/l/lc2I1892MP41TG/74AE425FG886N781O32643263WL3325355675">click here</a>.<br />
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he Dragon Tattoo") and Cameron Crowe ("We Bought a Zoo") -- with
casts that include Matt Damon, Scarlett Johansson and Daniel Craig -- opened
with modest to weak results.Despite predictions from studio executives that 2011 could
be a record-setter that would finish with a bang, domestic revenues remained
stuck at a sluggish pace that has lingered all year.Hollywood should finish
the year with $10.1 billion domestically, down 4.5 percent from 2010, according
to box-office tracker Hollywood.com.The picture gets worse taking into account higher ticket
prices, which mean Hollywood brings in fewer fans for each dollar spent.
Actual domestic attendance for 2011 will close out at about 1.27 billion,
down 5.3 percent from the previous year's and the lowest head count
since 1995, when admissions totaled 1.26 billion."Thank God 2011 is almost over,
because we've had a real rough run here at the end of
the year," said Hollywood.com analyst Paul Dergarabedian. "We always co
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ian civil aviation since the 1960s, with more than 800 planes built.
It also has remained in service with many post-Soviet carriers.In recent years,
Russia and other former Soviet nations have had some of the world's
worst air traffic safety records. Experts blame poor maintenance of the aging
aircraft, weak government controls, insufficient pilot training and a cost-cutting mentality.
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panies from China, Angola, Algeria and others. Few of those companies are
seen as having the capital or experience of the Exxons or Shells
of the world.Exxon Mobil has not commented on the deal since it
was announced by the Kurds in mid-November. Officials from the company did
not respond to requests for comment.If the deal goes forward, it would
be an enormous vote of confidence for the Kurds' oil policy and
could open the door for other majors to jump in."This is a
further step for the Kurds' autonomy in the federated Iraq," Theodore Karasik,
an analyst at the Dubai-based Institute for Near East and Gulf Military
Analysis said.For the company, the deal's benefits are obvious. It allows Exxon
Mobil to retain a share of the profits from the oil produced
while the service contracts offered by Baghdad provide the firms with a
flat fee per barrel of oil produced for their services.The Kurds win
the coup of netting a major company. They have unilaterally signed sc
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BAGHDAD An oil exploration deal between U.S. oil giant Exxon Mobil
and Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region is fueling political tensions in a country
where a post-U.S.-troop withdrawal spike in violence and political turmoil is clouding
the climate for foreign investments sorely needed by Iraq.Baghdad's anger over the
deal highlights the long-simmering power struggle between the Kurdish and central governments.
The dispute is building momentum as Iraqi Premier Nouri al-Maliki faces criticism
over his stewardship of a country where, years after the 2003 U.S.-led
war to topple Saddam Hussein, development remains a distant dream for millions.The
deal "will certainly contribute to further complicating the relationship" between the Kurds
and Baghdad, said Gala Riani, Middle East and North Africa Regional Manager
at the London-based IHS Global Insight.It "may also raise tensions in border
areas which have already become more restive as a result of the
withdrawal of the
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