Das Internetauktionshaus Spothunter wurde von den Besuchern des Gründermarktplatzes
der Financial Times Deutschland (FTD) zum Gründer der Woche in der Kalenderwoche 38
gewählt. ...5 Vote(s)
This was billed last week as an 'important announcement'.
Ron Paul to hold joint event in Washington today with all the other third party candidates
Financial Times - Ron Paul, the fringe Republican candidate who out-raised most of his opponents in the US presidential election, including John McCain, is to hold a joint event in Washington today with all the other third party candidates,
Some 48 hours after Brian Barwick’s shock resignation as chief executive of the Football Association during England’s lacklustre 2-2 draw with the Czech Republic, it appears that the role of Lord Triesman, FA chairman, was pivotal. The Labour continue read..
Government launches knife crime campaign - Financial TimesLONDON, May 29 - The government launched a three million pound national advertising campaign on Thursday to warn young people about the effects of knife crime amid growing fears that the issue is getting out of control. The move came as London’s
Clinton presses on as [...]
Inside Arthur Andersen: Shifting Values, Unexpected Consequences (Financial Times (Prentice Hall)) # Author:Susan E. Squires , Cynthia J. Smith , Lorna McDougall , William R. Yeack# Format:PDF 1.3MB# Page Count: 208 pages# Publisher: FT Press (June 12, 2003)# Language: English# ISBN-10: 0131408968# ISBN-13: 978-0131408968Inside Arthur Andersen provides an outstanding chronology of the birth and life of a great firm. Andersen had an extraordinary culture and exceptional strategies that resulted in unquestioned leadership professionally and in the financial and business world. Somehow management lost sight of its 'core' and greed destroyed what I valued as a partner for 22 years."—Dean Christensen, former Arthur Andersen local office managing partnerThe collapse of Arthur Andersen was amon
After the lengthy description of an alternative service there is a interesting anecdote given by Michael Sinclair in this Financial Times article about Language Services.
I think the key distinction may be that chinaONEcall’s local knowledge and affordability makes it something to use regularly throughout a trip to China and not only for emergencies. Infact Michael [...]
After the lengthy description of an alternative service there is a interesting anecdote given by Michael Sinclair in this Financial Times article about Language Services.
I think the key distinction may be that chinaONEcall’s local knowledge and affordability makes it something to use regularly throughout a trip to China and not only for emergencies. Infact Michael [...]
After the lengthy description of an alternative service there is a interesting anecdote given by Michael Sinclair in this Financial Times article about Language Services.
I think the key distinction may be that chinaONEcall’s local knowledge and affordability makes it something to use regularly throughout a trip to China and not only for emergencies. Infact Michael [...]
After the lengthy description of an alternative service there is a interesting anecdote given by Michael Sinclair in this Financial Times article about Language Services.
I think the key distinction may be that chinaONEcall’s local knowledge and affordability makes it something to use regularly throughout a trip to China and not only for emergencies. Infact Michael [...]
En un artículo titulado "El pesimismo económico eclipsa las elecciones españolas", Financial Times afirma que el aumento del paro y las malas noticias procedentes de la industria en el mes de febrero ensombrecen el futuro económico de España. Sea cual sea el resultado electoral del próximo domingo, los expertos consultados por este diario advierten de que los últimos datos económicos demuestran que España se enfrenta a un "aterrizaje forzoso".Las últimas cifras del paro conocidas, señalaron un crecimiento del 2,3% en febrero, y la desaceleración económica sugieren que el país se está dirigiendo a un "duro aterrizaje", según publicó ayer el 'Financial Times'."Los últimos datos proporcionan signos preocupantes de que la desaceleración en España es cada vez más extensa y
Healthy US interest in ‘medical tourism’
By Christopher Bowe in New York
Published: February 19 2008 22:37 | Last updated: February 19 2008 22:37
Two in five Americans would consider travelling abroad for a medical procedure if it cost half the US price and quality was at least equal, according to a Deloitte consumer health report published on Wednesday .
The data highlight the exploding interest in so-called medical tourism, where patients seek treatment for elective surgeries such as hip replacements available more cheaply overseas.
The following data is reproduced from the Financial Times and shows selected data provided by KPMG for the Financial Times 2006 MBA survey ranking for selected business schools.Source: http://www.mba-courses.com/
Sony and the hardware manufacturer NXP develop a new chip for mobil telephones. That announced the Internet site of the daily paper Financial Times Germany. If this chip is built into mobil telephones, the user with its mobil telephone can pay world-wide. The both enterprises invests 19 million euros into the development. The chip should be contained 2012 in 30 percent of all mobil telephones.
Hey guys!As I was posting some time ago, motorcycle news...who's buying what and who signes with what sponsors.Some big names in biking have been bought and sold recently. Good news for us? Or not?The first buy over to make headlines was MV Agusta flogging Husqvarna to BMW for an undisclosed sum. As usual, Agusta claims that the money raised will be channelled into developing new products for both MV - Cagiva. As usual, nothing will happen. BMW plan to run Husqvarna along the same lines as its Mini car brand – leaving it alone basically. Clearly BMW likes the idea of Husqvarna’s sales network as well as its younger customers switching to BMW in the future. In 2006 BMW sold 100,000 bikes compared to Husky’s 12,000. Also in the news was Dainese buying Italian helmet producer AGV from i
The flow of money into London-listed property stocks is running towards Hong Kong, China, India, Japan, Macau and Viet Nam.A Financial Times article entitled “Ho Chi Minh City awaits” that ran on October 8 called the trend “perhaps a logical step” as property markets in some Asian countries are expected to perform in line with their fast-growing economies.According to the paper, the three funds of Vinaland, JSM Indochina and Aseana Properties have some or all their exposure to Viet Nam due to its lack of high-end real estate, which is in constrast with increased investor interest in the country.
Senator Hagel had a piece, Internationalize Iraq, in the Financial Times on July 3rd, 2007. Once again, Chuck Hagel clearly and articulately lays out his views on how the United States should approach Iraq. The piece is well worth a read.
President Vaclav Klaus, answers questions about his earlier article about Manbearpig. He says that loss of freddom is more dire than the miniscule rise in temperature and that the rise in temperature is not as bad as the doom and...
Murdoch denies bowing to Beijing - Financial TimesExcerpt:"Mr Murdoch, whose family has a controlling stake in the News Corp media empire, tackled the issue of his conduct in China as questions about it have become a rallying point for those seeking to derail his $5bn (£2.5bn) takeover bid for Dow Jones and its Wall Street Journal newspaper."http://www.ft.com/cms/s/ff6863de-0955-11dc-a349-000b5df10621.htmlAlex
From the May 4 Financial Times, "Dandy with a taste for literary spats":He is gracious, strikingly modest and inquisitive to the point of turning an interviewer into an interviewee. His voice is soft, with a mild southern lilt; his comments are wry; his manner is – in the old-fashioned sense of the word – gay; he laughs softly and frequently, and it is impossible to imagine him, even at this senatorial age, pounding a lectern or as a cynic crabbing away in some dive bar.Found in "38 Ways to Win an Argument from Arthur Schopenhauer's The Art of Controversy":Contradiction and contention irritate a person into exaggerating his statements. By contradicting your opponent you may drive him into extending the statement beyond its natural limit. When you then contradict the exaggerated form of it, you look as though you had refuted the original statement. Contrarily, if your opponent tries to extend your own statement further than you intended, redefine your statement's limits and say, "
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"The truth about 13 of today's most widely touted investment strategies.
10 powerful lessons for every investor
Overcoming the enduring myths about markets
High dividend stocks: better and safer than bonds--or not?
Cheap stocks: cheap for a reason?
Should you invest in quality? Momentum? The next big thing? Or what?
You've heard 'em. (Maybe even from your broker!) They're
Nice and positiveClosing one's eyes at the theatre is usually taken as a sign of fatigue, or boredom brought on by the performance. It can also be a useful exercise. With Shakespeare, especially, to focus on the sound is to gauge the success of the evening, even when a severe directorial concept has been applied.With the Public Theatre's Macbeth, free in Central Park until July 9, the deliberately blinkered approach would lead you to the conclusion that Liev Schreiber alone, in the title role, knows what he is doing. The verse-speaking is smooth, the baritone timbre sufficient to suggest the role's standard depravity as well as the thwarted nobility that Schreiber tries to bring to the part.Sound by itself, on the other hand, would yield a more severe verdict for Jennifer Ehle, the production's Lady Macbeth. Her voice, denuded of visual cues, tends to fade like a mobile telephone in the mountains. And yet, eyes wide open, she kept compelling my attention. She looks spectacularl