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This is a scam. You cannot get a work visa for the UK for au pair or nanny jobs unless you have already been working for the family for at least a year in your home country and have the payslips, bank deposits and contract to prove it. UK employers cannot employ non EU nationals without a licence from the Home Office and would never be allowed to employ anyone that they had not interviewed or offer a job to someone that could be filled by a UK or EU worker. If you were offered a genuine job, your employer would issue you with a Certificate of Sponsorship. This is a unique number which is issued to your employer by the Home Office. You use this to make your visa application in your own country at a British embassy or commission. You pay a fee of 215 only direct to the visa application centre. Visas are never issued in the UK or through travel agents or other third parties. UK companies never ask people to use Western Union to transfer money. It is untraceable and irretrievable. If somebody that you have never met and do not know very well (close family or friends) asks you to send money this way it is 100% guaranteed to be a scam. UK companies never use 070 telephone nos and free email addresses. 070 nos lead you to believe you are dealing with someone in the UK. You are not. These numbers can be redirected anywhere in the world and are usually premium rate so you get scammed just by calling them. Royal Travel is a genuine company. It is not an ABTA member (Association of British Travel Agents). It is what is referred to as a 'bucket shop' where very cheap flights can be bought but you have no consumer protection if the airline goes out of business. The address is 595e Stockport Road, not 190. 190 Stockport Road is an apartment building and the postcode is MR13 9AB. Have nothing more to do with them.
1. Al merrick boards flyer mbm mbb m13 big willy surfboards ect.?
I think that yes it would be possibly to make two identical surf boards spec wise, but I am sure there are people who will tell you that an Al Merrick rides like a Marrick, end of story
2. What is the difference between a B45 and a M13 clarinet mouthpiece?
actual :) I play the two oboe and clarinet and that they sound like 2 completely diverse gadgets. even nevertheless, if there is not any oboist in a band then the solo could take transport of to a clarinet in the event that they needed some thing to sound equivalent to an oboe
3. money is tight so i hate to ask my parents I'm13 and i dont want to walk dogs or mow lawn and i cant baby sit.
If you do not want to work, you do not deserve the cash
4. Is it better to start with M13 and splash in RtR and GTC when building a deck?
Generally speaking, whichever option you choose, this is no big deal. Expansions and core sets released together are designed to play well with each other. But core sets are also designed to be reasonable stand-alone products. Core sets are designed to help you learn Magic. The mix of cards is targeted towards newer players. The creatures and spells are generally about as powerful as the ones in expansions, but many of the lower-rarity cards are simpler. In particular, you are less likely to find surprising or "counterintuitive" mechanics that change the basic resource relationships in the game; cards are also less likely to have difficult requirements or restrictions.However, there is no one-size-fits-all approach. In my experience, new players learn best when they are interested and excited about the game, regardless of what exactly it is that they are doing. The expansion sets are more complex but not overwhelmingly so. If you are really excited by the idea of taxing your opponent to death, for example, then by all means, grab that (Gatecrash) Orzhov intro deck - there may be a bit more up-front complexity in figuring out how to use the cards well, but your enthusiasm will also help you get up the learning curve faster. My wife learned to play just fine with Myr of Mirrodin, an expansion intro deck; the deck's strategy just clicked naturally for her, so within two or three games she was already making substantive improvements using cards from boosters. The complexity difference is most noticeable in drafting. Core-set drafts tend to be much more forgiving, with more of a focus on deckbuilding fundamentals like building your deck around a mana curve and choosing cards that support a consistent game plan. Drafting an expansion set well, in contrast, tends to demand a good understanding of the internal synergies and idiosyncracies of the enrivonment. Cards in expansion sets like Return to Ravnica are not necessarily any more powerful than cards in the core set. Core sets usually have the "basic" version of an effect, whereas expansion sets tend to feature a modified version that plays to the set's mechanical themes (compare Cancel and Dissipate, for instance). However, there are always at least a few high-powered staples in core sets - cards like Mana Leak, Lightning Bolt, and Farseek - as well as powerhouse "bomb" cards like Sun Titan and Thragtusk. Tournament decks pretty much universally have cards from a lot of different sets, because being able to cherrypick the best cards available gives players a competitive edge.One area where the expansion sets really shine is exploring specific themes. Core sets often have some themed cards, like the different Soldiers in M13, but with fewer cards than a full block and less specialized mechanics, they do not go as deep as the expansions do. If you want to build a graveyard-abusing deck, or an elf deck, or an all-artifacts deck based around Tempered Steel, you will likely want to focus on cards from a particular expansion set that focused on those themes