I see the two winners. It’s true when I’m looking at an empty lot; I see the elaborate mansion that could stand there some day. To hear the Jim O’Neill speaking (FT interview) – is the same. Make me wonder what exactly bring me down. The two winners of Euromillions. It’s for short. To don’t write nation of the shit from camel turned around, or cocaine Royal Family of Lancaster’s, or english speaking world, or ‘Engineering Managements’ like that. It’s almost become the synonym of unnecessary. But, when the City commencing saying to me: ‘Don’t eat!’ in “theirs” language – I just see how the G-20 runs out of amo. Of course, before this was dream. The pointer in the speedometer hit the 120 miles per hour – and than boom!, again electric shock, again the blow in my head, again the sleep faint away. (To see a speedometer in your dream is analogous to the pace of your life. Are you living life on the fast lane or are you moving at a snail's pace? Consider the numbers for additional significance.) Well, after 19 billions of Rio-Chinalco, after the 4,5 billions of GM – Opel – it’s a clear message to me: “Clear the air”. And again, for the benefits who’s doing this to me. Let’s don’t use the names, entities and other “juridical faces”. Let’s just be for the all-purpose, the broad and wide-ranging, maybe even the all-generalizing PRESENTATION. To draw the springs to my corner. Like the normally people do when are want to slay the fish. They start this “Structuring of the Industry” by the tail. Me, like the good “Blood Runner” – go just to administrate the project, with a help of short set of instructions. You, who got the “level” enough – will “work it out”. 1. The Italian lira. The son kills his “father”. 2. The two mongoloids disappearing in Glasgow, because the two winners of Euromillions. 3. My ‘friend’ Orlando from “what-you-do-to-find-the-job” and hotty participation of EDP in G-20 financial ministers meeting. And in the killings of clean “5 off-shores” during the days before. Now, between this and the next point I’d like to put my two fingers for Total clarification. a) Image: “Inside a large office building an elaborate network of vents”. b) Message: “Clearing the air”.4. The Top чий. The ebalo (face) of Fort Hood and his direct connection to the G-20 faces. 5. The Kucheriavchenko (this is how I always called the previous or the future russian finance minister) and why he strat the war and with which result. 6. The point for slaying (not frying) the fish. I was putting one phrase written in German, about German, about sranaia churka/cats and about the Spain. Not finishing this, the corporative culture of cocaine Royal Family of Lancaster’s was calling to invite me to the “Blood Runners” Triton Court, 14 Finsbury Square, London, EC2A 1BR. MOORGATE! Just by the tone of this SMS, I completely sure, that this was direct indication from cocaine ex-President of Portuguese Republic a big swine Jorge Sampaio. Why I insist to put just small instruction in my Basel II Interbank Agreement.
Murdoch could block Google searches entirely. Murdoch admits online charging delay. Murdoch's plan for paywalls 'raises questions of anti-trust law'. More on charging for content. Monday 9 November 2009 09.08 GMT. Rupert Murdoch says he will remove stories from Google's search index as a way to encourage people to pay for content online. In an interview with Sky News Australia, the mogul said that newspapers in his media empire - including the Sun, the Times and the Wall Street Journal - would consider blocking Google entirely once they had enacted plans to charge people for reading their stories on the web. In recent months, Murdoch his lieutenants have stepped up their war of words with Google, accusing it of "kleptomania" and acting as a "parasite" for including in its Google News pages. But asked why News Corp executives had not chosen to simply remove their websites entirely from Google's search indexes - a simple technical operation - Murdoch said just such a move was on the cards. "I think we will, but that's when we start charging," he said. "We have it already with the Wall Street Journal. We have a wall, but it's not right to the ceiling. You can get, usually, the first paragraph from any story - but if you're not a paying subscriber to WSJ.com all you get is a paragraph and a subscription form." The 78-year-old mogul's assertion, however, is not actually correct: users who click through to screened WSJ.com articles from Google searches are usually offered the full text of the story without any subscription block. It is only users who find their way to the story through the Wall Street Journal's website who are told they must subscribe before they can read further. Murdoch added that he did not agree with the idea that search enginesfell under "fair use" rules - an argument many aggregator websites use as part of their legal justification for reproducing excerpts of news stories online. "There's a doctrine called fair use, which we believe to be challenged in the courts and would bar it altogether... but we'll take that slowly." Murdoch's attitude towards the internet - which appeared to have thawed when he bought social networking site MySpace for $580m in 2005 - has stiffened more recently. Over the summer, Murdoch had announced that he planned to introduce website charges by next year - but last week it emerged that his controversial plans had been delayed, saying that "I wouldn't promise that we're going to meet that date". Additionally, it emerged that MySpace, which has struggled in the face of competition from Facebook in recent years, was due to fall short of its targets in a lucrative search deal with Google - a slip that could cost the site more than $100m in payments from the internet advertising giant. In the Sky News Australia interview, Murdoch underlined his feelings towards those companies by listing a litany of names of those that he felt were overstepping the boundaries. "The people who simply just pick up everything and run with it - steal our stories, we say they steal our stories - they just take them," he said. "That's Google, that's Microsoft, that's Ask.com, a whole lot of people... they shouldn't have had it free all the time, and I think we've been asleep."
Hampton joins Anglo American board. November 9 2009 08:18. Anglo American has appointed Sir Philip Hampton, the new chairman of Royal Bank of Scotland, as a non-executive director, in what the South African-based mining group promises will be a shake-up in its boardroom. The appointment of Sir Philip comes less than a week after the state-supported bank accepted a further £25.5bn bail-out from the UK government. He will join Anglo as chairman Sir John Parker attempts to address investor concerns in the wake of a failed merger with rivalXstrata. The changes include a radically slimmed down management structure, which will see 2,700 white collar positions cut in an attempt to save $120m (£72m) a year.
”I am delighted to welcome Sir Philip Hampton to Anglo American, the first in a series of appointments as we refresh the board,” Sir John said. Cynthia Carroll, Anglo’s chief executive, is aiming to make the divisions of the South African mining group work less like fiefdoms and more like embassies, taking orders from the centre. However, analysts have commented on the role of Sir John, brought in during the Xstrata approach, as important in bolstering Anglo’s defence against any future approaches. Xstrata is eligible to re-approach Anglo in April 2010. Sir Philip has previously been chairman at J Sainsbury and group finance director at British Steel, British Gas, BT Group and Lloyds TSB. He was also chairman of UK Financial Investments Limited, the body that manages the government’s stakes in state-supported banks Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group.
Goldman Sachs to pay huge bonuses. Updated on 15 October 2009. By Channel 4 News. Goldman Sachs is to pay billions of pounds in bonuses to employees, just one year after the financial meltdown. The unacceptable face of capitalism, or just reward for hard work? John Sparks reports. Within weeks of world leaders pledging to beat back the bonus culture, Goldman Sachs is giving them two fingers - victory over their complete global failure to regulate the banks and their continuing excesses. As Gordon Brown declares "we can't see a return to the bonus culture', how so? What is going to stop it? Boom times are definitely back for staff at the Wall Street banking giant Goldman Sachs, which has just reported a fourfold increase in profits. Thanks to soaring stock prices, the bank made almost £2bn in the last quarter. That is equivalent to more than £20m a day. And that helped the bank set aside a massive fund to reward its 31,000 employees. But it has already sparked a huge backlash, with critics accusing Goldman of emerging from the financial crisis "unrepentant and unreformed". Rival JPMorgan revealed better than expected profits of more than £2bn, as soaring stock prices helped boost investment earnings.
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