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Aluminium Cabinet Doors – Video -
March 5, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Aluminium Cabinet Doors
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By: Marla Clery
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Aluminium Cabinet Doors - Video
Cabinet Drawer Fronts – Video -
March 5, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Cabinet Drawer Fronts
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By: Marla Clery
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Cabinet Drawer Fronts - Video
Cabinet Doors For Sale – Video -
March 5, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Cabinet Doors For Sale
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By: Marla Clery
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Cabinet Doors For Sale - Video
Cabinet Design – Video -
March 5, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Cabinet Design
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By: Marla Clery
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Cabinet Design - Video
Buy Cabinet Doors Online – Video -
March 5, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Buy Cabinet Doors Online
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By: Marla Clery
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Buy Cabinet Doors Online - Video
Amish Cabinet Doors – Video -
March 5, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Amish Cabinet Doors
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By: Marla Clery
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Amish Cabinet Doors - Video
Cairo Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi issued on Thursday a decision to reshuffle the cabinet with eight new faces, in a move which replaces Egypt's Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim.
Eight new ministers took the constitutional oath in the presence of Sisi and Prime Minister Ibrahim Mehleb, a presidential statement read.
Former Interior Minister Ibrahim was meanwhile appointed as an adviser to Mehleb, a position equivalent to that of deputy prime minister.
The new ministers include: Technical Education and Training Minister Mohamed Youssef, Agriculture and Land Cultivation Minister Salah al-Din Helal, Culture Minister Abdel Wahed al-Nabawy, Education Minister Moheb al-Rifai, Interior Minister Magdi Abdel Ghaffar, Communication and Information Technology Minister Khaled Negm, Population Minister Hala Youssef and Tourism Minister Khaled Ramy.
The reshuffle adds two new portfolios to Egypt's cabinet; the ministry of technical education and training and the ministry of population.
The reshuffle aims to "pump new blood" into the cabinet, state news agency MENA quoted Mehleb as saying.
Mehleb also told reporters on Thursday the reshuffle will not affect Egypt's anticipated investment summit, scheduled to take place on March 13 - 15 in the resort city of Sharm el-Sheikh.
"Egypt is a state of institutions," Mehleb said in a press conference on the government's preparation for the investment summit.
Ibrahim was appointed as minister of interior by ousted Islamist President Mohamed Mursi in January 2013. He has remained in his position despite Mursi's military ouster in July 2013, following mass protests against his rule.
His replacement, Magdi Abdel Ghaffar, served as director of the ministry's National Security Department from July 2011 to October 2012.
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Egypt: Egypt Appoints Eight New Cabinet Ministers, Replaces Interior Minister
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Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi on Thursday replaced the country's powerful interior minister as part of a Cabinet reshuffle, in what was taken as a sign of growing frustration at the security forces' inability to staunch an increasingly virulent insurgency.
Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim played a key role in el-Sissi's 2013 ouster of President Mohammed Morsi and the subsequent bloody crackdown on his Islamist supporters that left hundreds dead and thousands in detention.
But despite his bloody track record, Ibrahim's forces had struggled to combat a burgeoning insurgency in the strategic Sinai peninsula and failed to halt a series of low-grade bomb attacks in Cairo and other cities.
Ibrahim was replaced by another police general, Magdy Abdel-Ghaffar, a career officer in the feared State Security Agency who briefly led the agency in 2011 and 2012. The choice of a veteran officer indicated no letup in the government's heavy-handed treatment of its opponents.
El-Sissi later named Ibrahim an adviser to the prime minister, a largely ceremonial position, in what appeared to be a symbolic show of gratitude for his support of the 2013 military takeover. The move resembled one taken in December, when el-Sissi pensioned off intelligence chief Mohammed Farid el-Tohamy while awarding him one of the state's highest awards. El-Tohamy, a longtime patron of el-Sissi, was also instrumental in the crackdown on the Brotherhood.
Ibrahim's removal followed an uptick in bomb attacks blamed on Islamic militants targeting the heart of the heavily protected capital. The latest such attack was on Monday, when a bomb at a police checkpoint killed two people outside the nation's highest appeals court in downtown Cairo. Another bomb killed two people in the southern city of Aswan on Sunday, and a similar wave of explosions rocked the Cairo district of Giza last week, killing one and injuring about 10.
On Wednesday, a massive fire destroyed most of the city's showcase convention center in an eastern suburb. No foul play was suspected, but the fire was widely seen as the latest example of government negligence.
The Cabinet reshuffle also saw the replacement of the ministers of culture, tourism, education, telecommunications and agriculture. El-Sissi introduced two new portfolios, for vocational training and population.
It was the first Cabinet reshuffle since el-Sissi took office in June, nearly a year after he ousted Morsi amid widespread protests against Egypt's first freely elected leader.
Morsi had named Ibrahim interior minister in January 2013, but six months later Ibrahim and his largely militarized police force sided with the millions of protesters who took to the streets demanding Morsi step down.
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Egypt's El-Sissi Replaces Interior Minister in Reshuffle
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Living room remodeling part 4
By: Baytowncowboy85
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Living room remodeling part 4 - Video
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Room Remodeling | Comments Off on Living room remodeling part 4 – Video
Isabella & Max Rooms -
March 5, 2015 by
Mr HomeBuilder
I've got nothing that pretty to show you at the end of this post, just a blank slate and a demonstration that DIY can be a slippery slope. Once you begin it can be hard to stop and it's probably best to have at least an idea of where you are going! I think I do.
It started with this one single cabinet hanging up there all alone on the wall. I have a thing about single cabinets somewhat randomly placed in a kitchen, they bug me. So I took it down. It was a bit tricky at first figuring out exactly how it was hung and how to take it down without damaging it, (perhaps it can be used elsewhere, in the garage or even sold or donated) but once I got the hang of it (no pun intended) the job was pretty easy!
And I was crushing on the after. The kitchen felt immediately more open and light.
So naturally, over the next couple of days I kept eyeing this one in the corner every time I passed through the kitchen.
So down it went.
Okay. That was easy. I like it. I'm just going for it!
(And for a little background info so this doesn't seem completely random and crazy stupid, when we moved in I purposely put nothing in all the upper cabinets just to see if we needed them or not, exploring the idea that maybe the uppers could go. So there is a plan. This is the upside of getting rid of so much junk. In the previous house, when I packed up the kitchen, I can't tell you how much stuff I came across tucked into all those cabinets that hadn't even been touched since placing it into the recesses when moving in 6 years prior. All that went bye, bye. And when you don't have extra stuff... you have design options!)
First I took off the doors. Yep, I can see this... they are coming down!
The only hiccup I ran into was some 20 plus feet of wiring tucked behind and running along the top of this wall of cabinetry. Obviously not installed when the house was built, apparently the previous owner had tied in additional wiring to two existing outlets and tucked it away to add under cabinet lighting. It was easy to remove; all I did was turn off the power, open up two switch plates and remove the extensions, afterwards pulling yard upon yard of wiring out from behind the walls. Actually I felt relieved having that wiring gone, who knows if this was even up to code, right?!
Once the wiring was gone it was breeze to remove the remaining cabinets, with the exception of the microwave and cabinet above hiding venting to the outside. I had intended to leave these up until I found the wall hood that would be installed in its place. Oh, what the heck. That looks silly. They're gone too.
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Isabella & Max Rooms
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