The Grand Slam of Golf, an exhibition event in October, was to be held at Donald Trump’s golf course in Los Angeles but will be played elsewhere in light of his comments on Mexican immigrants.
Category Archives: Viva!
Major Job Cuts Expected at Microsoft
The layoffs are to be announced just weeks after Satya Nadella, the chief executive, warned of “tough choices” ahead.
Towards the distant fells
allybeag posted a photo:

From up here on Tallentire hill, distances are foreshortened. You’d really think that Grassmoor (the big fell on the left) was just a few fields away, but it’s a drive of at least 3/4 of an hour.
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Nun Says Her Signature Was Forged To Block Convent Sale To Katy Perry
One of the nuns who once lived in the Los Feliz convent Katy Perry wants to buy, says her signature was forged to sell the property to restaurant owner Dana Hollister instead of the singer. [ more › ]
Rare Honor for U.S. Women’s Soccer Team as New York City Plans Ticker-Tape Parade
My dad kept these fortunes in his wallet, and my mom found them…
My dad kept these fortunes in his wallet, and my mom found them after he died.
Economic Scene: Germany’s Debt History, Echoed in Greece
As policy makers know well — and Germany perhaps better than any — major debt overhangs are solved only by writing down the debt. And the longer the delay, the deeper the pain.
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via Economic Scene: Germany’s Debt History, Echoed in Greece.
Camden Harbor
my hood
www.german-foreign-policy.com Greece’s No
The “No”
Germany’s imposition of an austerity policy suffered a first serious defeat with yesterday’s “No” in the Greek referendum. Aided by the EU, the ECB and the IMF, Germany has been able to impose its austerity dictate on Greece for the past five years, ruining the country’s economy and causing social devastation of appalling dimensions.[1] A clear majority of the Greek population has now clearly rejected that austerity dictate: Yesterday, more than 61 percent voted against the proposed agreement with Greece’s creditors, which would have prolonged the austerity policy, despite its catastrophic consequences. This clear rejection is all the more remarkable, due to the fact that not only had the Greek conservative establishment put its full weight behind a “Yes”, but even Germany and substantial parts of the EU had interfered in an unprecedented manner in the Greek referendum debate and had massively increased their pressure on the Greek population – up until yesterday.


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