��July 2009
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- Spring posted on 07/18/2009
- July posted on 07/18/2009
- ѩ posted on 07/17/2009
- zt posted on 07/17/2009Goldman Sachs bites Uncle Sam's hand The investment bank is fat and happy again, but you wouldn't know it from its squabbling with the Treasury over the warrants in the TARP deal. By Allan Sloan, senior editor at large July 17, 2009: 10:39 AM ET NEW YORK (Fortune) -- I've always thought that the guys running Goldman Sachs were really smart, not only about making money, but also about projecting a classy image to the world outside of Wall Street. Clearly, I overestimated them. If there was ever
- July posted on 07/17/2009
- touche posted on 07/17/2009
- touche posted on 07/17/2009
- qinggang posted on 07/17/2009
- С۷ posted on 07/17/2009
- July posted on 07/17/2009
- ƽ posted on 07/17/2009
- ƽ posted on 07/16/2009
- xw posted on 07/16/2009
- qinggang posted on 07/16/2009
- fanghuzhai posted on 07/16/2009Green Chair Drama, not rated Ǿٶˡ Review: Of all the Asian film industries, the Koreans are probably the best at making erotic dramas, well, erotic. In comparison, Hong Kong erotic films look more like what not to do during sex (watching Hong Kongers fake sex on screen is like watching a diabetic twitching from seizures), and the Japaneses idea of sex onscreen invariably involves bondage, torture, abduction, or a combination of all three. With movies like Summertime, The Sweet
- xw posted on 07/15/2009
- LM posted on 07/15/2009
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/8151355.stm Just what is a big salary? By Finlo Rohrer BBC News Magazine Boris Johnson refers to £250,000 a year as "chicken-feed". Manchester City offer six figures a week. Goldman Sachs doles out big bonuses. BBC bosses face flak over their earnings. But just what constitutes a "big" salary these days and how has how we feel about them changed? Rarely a day seems to pass these days when there is not soul-searching over how much peo
- zt posted on 07/15/2009China Unrest Tied To Labor Program Uighurs Sent to Work in Other Regions By Ariana Eunjung Cha Washington Post Foreign Service Wednesday, July 15, 2009 URUMQI, China -- When the local government began recruiting young Muslim Uighurs in this far western region for jobs at the Xuri Toy Factory in the country's booming coastal region, the response was mixed. Some, lured by the eye-popping salaries and benefits, eagerly signed up. But others, like Safyden's 21-year-old sister, were wary.
- Babi posted on 07/15/2009
- maya posted on 07/15/2009
- fanghuzhai posted on 07/15/2009
- ϰ posted on 07/15/2009
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