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Latest Posts By pharoah88
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| 11-Sep-2010 17:53 |
SaizenREIT
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SaizenReit - might be rising from tomb soon
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SME lender is Japan’s first bank failure in 7 years
TOKYO
The Financial Services Agency (FSA) has told the bank it cannot do any business for at least three days and must make efforts to protect existing depositors, the agency said in a statement.
Japanese media said the FSA is likely to let the bank go under and will only refund depositors a maximum of ¥10 million ($160,000). This would be the first time that a cap on deposit insurance had been used in Japan, since it was acted in 2002 after a slew of banks went bankrupt with the bursting of the economic bubble in the 1990s.
The bank specialises in providing banking services for small and medium sized businesses. It may report a negative net worth of ¥150 billion, the
Banking shares were mixed in Tokyo trade on Friday; the benchmark Nikkei Index was up 1.90 per cent.
Also on Friday, Japan approved a US$11 billion ($15 billion) stimulus package aimed at helping the export driven economy tackle deflation and the impact of a surging yen.
The previously announced plan, approved by the Cabinet of Prime Minister Naoto Kan, includes initiatives aimed at boosting consumption and creating employment for graduates. It is also intended to provide investment in green industries and offer support for small business.
The fresh stimulus package of ¥915 billion will be financed by reserve funds and is expected to lift the country’s gross domestic product by about 0.3 per cent, creating around 200,000 jobs.
The plan also specifies a strong yen as “a problem that cannot be unaddressed”, stating that the government “will take determined action, including intervention, when needed”.
Revised data on Friday showed that Japan’s gross domestic product grew by an annualised 1.5 per cent in the April-June quarter, well above an initial estimate of 0.4 per cent. |
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| 11-Sep-2010 17:50 |
User Research/Opinions
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%%%% WORLD ECONOMIC SUMMIT %%%%
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SME lender is Japan’s first bank failure in 7 years TOKYO The Financial Services Agency (FSA) has told the bank it cannot do any business for at least three days and must make efforts to protect existing depositors, the agency said in a statement. Japanese media said the FSA is likely to let the bank go under and will only refund depositors a maximum of ¥10 million ($160,000). This would be the first time that a cap on deposit insurance had been used in Japan, since it was acted in 2002 after a slew of banks went bankrupt with the bursting of the economic bubble in the 1990s. The bank specialises in providing banking services for small and medium sized businesses. It may report a negative net worth of ¥150 billion, the Banking shares were mixed in Tokyo trade on Friday; the benchmark Nikkei Index was up 1.90 per cent. Also on Friday, Japan approved a US$11 billion ($15 billion) stimulus package aimed at helping the export driven economy tackle deflation and the impact of a surging yen. The previously announced plan, approved by the Cabinet of Prime Minister Naoto Kan, includes initiatives aimed at boosting consumption and creating employment for graduates. It is also intended to provide investment in green industries and offer support for small business. The fresh stimulus package of ¥915 billion will be financed by reserve funds and is expected to lift the country’s gross domestic product by about 0.3 per cent, creating around 200,000 jobs. The plan also specifies a strong yen as “a problem that cannot be unaddressed”, stating that the government “will take determined action, including intervention, when needed”. Revised data on Friday showed that Japan’s gross domestic product grew by an annualised 1.5 per cent in the April-June quarter, well above an initial estimate of 0.4 per cent. — The private Incubator Bank of Japan (IBJ) was reported on Friday to have been ordered to halt operations and will file for bankruptcy yesterday, in what would be Japan’s first bank failure in seven years, officials said.Nikkei Business Daily reported.AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 17:34 |
User Research/Opinions
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<*> Free And Free <*><*><*> Pay And Pay <*>
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kItchen gOd |
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| 11-Sep-2010 17:26 |
User Research/Opinions
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<*> Free And Free <*><*><*> Pay And Pay <*>
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kIngmaker Is ObjectIve makes Other kIng gOdactOr Is sUbjectIve acts Ownself gOd |
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| 11-Sep-2010 17:09 |
AusGroup
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AUSGROUP: 1H09 revenue up 28.8% to reach A$260.5 m
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AUSGROUP management must nOt dO It "My Way" bUt must dO It "hIs waY" nOt wIth "The Wind Beneath My Wings" bUt with "The wInd beneath hIs wIngs"
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| 11-Sep-2010 17:02 |
Others
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TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER
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Aussie churches ban Sinatra’s My Way MELBOURNE — Sports anthems and popular songs such as Frank Sinatra’s My Way have been banned from funerals at more than 200 Australian churches after new orders from Melbourne’s archbishop. The edict follows a study that found the signature song for Australian Rules Football team Collingwood was one of the top requests at Melbourne funerals, along with My Way and the Bette Midler version of The Wind Beneath My Wings . Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart said sports songs were not appropriate for a service which emphasises the solemn nature of death and is not designed as a celebration of the deceased’s life. “Secular items are never to be sung or played at a Catholic funeral, such as romantic ballads, pop or rock music, political songs, football club songs,” Archbishop Hart wrote in the new guidelines. “At the funerals of children ... nursery rhymes and sentimental secular songs are inappropriate because these may intensify grief.” The move in Melbourne has received a mixed reaction, a spokesman for the church said. One parish priest, Father Bob Maguire from South Melbourne, said the move would make it harder to balance the needs of mourners with those of the church. He told Melbourne’s Herald Sun newspaper he preferred to see funerals as “family affairs attended by clergy, not a clergymen’s affair attended by family”. AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 17:00 |
AusGroup
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AUSGROUP: 1H09 revenue up 28.8% to reach A$260.5 m
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Aussie churches ban Sinatra’s My Way — MELBOURNE Sports anthems and popular songs such as Frank Sinatra’s My Way have been banned from funerals at more than 200 Australian churches after new orders from Melbourne’s archbishop. The edict follows a study that found the signature song for Australian Rules Football team Collingwood was one of the top requests at Melbourne funerals, along with My Way and the Bette Midler version of The Wind Beneath My Wings . Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart said sports songs were not appropriate for a service which emphasises the solemn nature of death and is not designed as a celebration of the deceased’s life. “Secular items are never to be sung or played at a Catholic funeral, such as romantic ballads, pop or rock music, political songs, football club songs,” Archbishop Hart wrote in the new guidelines. “At the funerals of children ... nursery rhymes and sentimental secular songs are inappropriate because these may intensify grief.” The move in Melbourne has received a mixed reaction, a spokesman for the church said. One parish priest, Father Bob Maguire from South Melbourne, said the move would make it harder to balance the needs of mourners with those of the church. He told Melbourne’s Herald Sun newspaper he preferred to see funerals as “family affairs attended by clergy, not a clergymen’s affair attended by family”. AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:59 |
User Research/Opinions
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^ Productivity ^ [Effecacy Efficiency Economy]
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Aussie churches ban Sinatra’s My Way — MELBOURNE Sports anthems and popular songs such as Frank Sinatra’s My Way have been banned from funerals at more than 200 Australian churches after new orders from Melbourne’s archbishop. The edict follows a study that found the signature song for Australian Rules Football team Collingwood was one of the top requests at Melbourne funerals, along with My Way and the Bette Midler version of The Wind Beneath My Wings . Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart said sports songs were not appropriate for a service which emphasises the solemn nature of death and is not designed as a celebration of the deceased’s life. “Secular items are never to be sung or played at a Catholic funeral, such as romantic ballads, pop or rock music, political songs, football club songs,” Archbishop Hart wrote in the new guidelines. “At the funerals of children ... nursery rhymes and sentimental secular songs are inappropriate because these may intensify grief.” The move in Melbourne has received a mixed reaction, a spokesman for the church said. One parish priest, Father Bob Maguire from South Melbourne, said the move would make it harder to balance the needs of mourners with those of the church. He told Melbourne’s Herald Sun newspaper he preferred to see funerals as “family affairs attended by clergy, not a clergymen’s affair attended by family”. AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:58 |
User Research/Opinions
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&&&&&&&& PROFITS & PHILANTHROPHY &&&&&&&&
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Aussie churches ban Sinatra’s My Way — MELBOURNE Sports anthems and popular songs such as Frank Sinatra’s My Way have been banned from funerals at more than 200 Australian churches after new orders from Melbourne’s archbishop. The edict follows a study that found the signature song for Australian Rules Football team Collingwood was one of the top requests at Melbourne funerals, along with My Way and the Bette Midler version of The Wind Beneath My Wings . Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart said sports songs were not appropriate for a service which emphasises the solemn nature of death and is not designed as a celebration of the deceased’s life. “Secular items are never to be sung or played at a Catholic funeral, such as romantic ballads, pop or rock music, political songs, football club songs,” Archbishop Hart wrote in the new guidelines. “At the funerals of children ... nursery rhymes and sentimental secular songs are inappropriate because these may intensify grief.” The move in Melbourne has received a mixed reaction, a spokesman for the church said. One parish priest, Father Bob Maguire from South Melbourne, said the move would make it harder to balance the needs of mourners with those of the church. He told Melbourne’s Herald Sun newspaper he preferred to see funerals as “family affairs attended by clergy, not a clergymen’s affair attended by family”. AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:56 |
User Research/Opinions
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<*> Free And Free <*><*><*> Pay And Pay <*>
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Aussie churches ban Sinatra’s My Way — MELBOURNE Sports anthems and popular songs such as Frank Sinatra’s My Way have been banned from funerals at more than 200 Australian churches after new orders from Melbourne’s archbishop. The edict follows a study that found the signature song for Australian Rules Football team Collingwood was one of the top requests at Melbourne funerals, along with My Way and the Bette Midler version of The Wind Beneath My Wings . Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart said sports songs were not appropriate for a service which emphasises the solemn nature of death and is not designed as a celebration of the deceased’s life. “Secular items are never to be sung or played at a Catholic funeral, such as romantic ballads, pop or rock music, political songs, football club songs,” Archbishop Hart wrote in the new guidelines. “At the funerals of children ... nursery rhymes and sentimental secular songs are inappropriate because these may intensify grief.” The move in Melbourne has received a mixed reaction, a spokesman for the church said. One parish priest, Father Bob Maguire from South Melbourne, said the move would make it harder to balance the needs of mourners with those of the church. He told Melbourne’s Herald Sun newspaper he preferred to see funerals as “family affairs attended by clergy, not a clergymen’s affair attended by family”. AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:54 |
User Research/Opinions
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~~~~ CORPORATE GOVERNANCE ~~~~
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Aussie churches ban Sinatra’s My Way — Sports anthems and popular songs such as Frank Sinatra’s My Way have been banned from funerals at more than 200 Australian churches after new orders from Melbourne’s archbishop. MELBOURNE The edict follows a study that found the signature song for Australian Rules Football team Collingwood was one of the top requests at Melbourne funerals, along with My Way and the Bette Midler version of The Wind Beneath My Wings . Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart said sports songs were not appropriate for a service which emphasises the solemn nature of death and is not designed as a celebration of the deceased’s life. “Secular items are never to be sung or played at a Catholic funeral, such as romantic ballads, pop or rock music, political songs, football club songs,” Archbishop Hart wrote in the new guidelines. “At the funerals of children ... nursery rhymes and sentimental secular songs are inappropriate because these may intensify grief.” The move in Melbourne has received a mixed reaction, a spokesman for the church said. One parish priest, Father Bob Maguire from South Melbourne, said the move would make it harder to balance the needs of mourners with those of the church. He told Melbourne’s Herald Sun newspaper he preferred to see funerals as “family affairs attended by clergy, not a clergymen’s affair attended by family”. AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:52 |
User Research/Opinions
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%%%% WORLD ECONOMIC SUMMIT %%%%
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Aussie churches ban Sinatra’s My Way — Sports anthems and popular songs such as Frank Sinatra’s My Way have been banned from funerals at more than 200 Australian churches after new orders from Melbourne’s archbishop. MELBOURNE The edict follows a study that found the signature song for Australian Rules Football team Collingwood was one of the top requests at Melbourne funerals, along with My Way and the Bette Midler version of The Wind Beneath My Wings . Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart said sports songs were not appropriate for a service which emphasises the solemn nature of death and is not designed as a celebration of the deceased’s life. “Secular items are never to be sung or played at a Catholic funeral, such as romantic ballads, pop or rock music, political songs, football club songs,” Archbishop Hart wrote in the new guidelines. “At the funerals of children ... nursery rhymes and sentimental secular songs are inappropriate because these may intensify grief.” The move in Melbourne has received a mixed reaction, a spokesman for the church said. One parish priest, Father Bob Maguire from South Melbourne, said the move would make it harder to balance the needs of mourners with those of the church. He told Melbourne’s Herald Sun newspaper he preferred to see funerals as “family affairs attended by clergy, not a clergymen’s affair attended by family”. AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:28 |
Others
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TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER
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Aussie churches ban Sinatra’s My WayMELBOURNE The edict follows a study that found the signature song for Australian Rules Football team Collingwood was one of the top requests at Melbourne funerals, along with — Sports anthems and popular songs such as Frank Sinatra’s My Way have been banned from funerals at more than 200 Australian churches after new orders from Melbourne’s archbishop.My Way and the Bette Midler version ofThe Wind Beneath My Wings Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart said sports songs were not appropriate for a service which emphasises the solemn nature of death and is not designed as a celebration of the deceased’s life. “Secular items are never to be sung or played at a Catholic funeral, such as romantic ballads, pop or rock music, political songs, football club songs,” Archbishop Hart wrote in the new guidelines. “At the funerals of children ... nursery rhymes and sentimental secular songs are inappropriate because these may intensify grief.” The move in Melbourne has received a mixed reaction, a spokesman for the church said. One parish priest, Father Bob Maguire from South Melbourne, said the move would make it harder to balance the needs of mourners with those of the church. He told Melbourne’s .Herald Sun newspaper he preferred to see funerals as “family affairs attended by clergy, not a clergymen’s affair attended by family”. AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:21 |
Others
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TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER
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O V E R H E A R D : an UNcle mObIle-phOned an aUntIe : "Last mId-nIght a gamIng mentOr IntervIewed me at MBS casInO!"
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:17 |
Others
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TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER
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gamIng mentOr
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:15 |
Others
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TRADE FREELY & LiVE LONGER
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Aussie ‘kingmaker’ MP declines ministerial post
SYDNEY Country lawmaker Rob Oakeshott, one of the three independents dubbed “kingmakers” after polls gave neither Ms Gillard or the opposition enough seats to govern, said he had turned down an offer to become Regional Affairs Minister. Mr Oakeshott said his decision to back Ms Gillard had angered some parliamentary colleagues and he knew this would make it difficult to deliver the US$9 billion ($12 billion) package for rural Australia the independents had negotiated with her. — An independent Australian politician whose support was crucial to keeping Prime Minister Julia Gillard in power on Friday knocked back an offer to become a minister in her minority government.AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:12 |
AusGroup
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AUSGROUP: 1H09 revenue up 28.8% to reach A$260.5 m
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Aussie ‘kingmaker’ MP declines ministerial post
SYDNEY Country lawmaker Rob Oakeshott, one of the three independents dubbed “kingmakers” after polls gave neither Ms Gillard or the opposition enough seats to govern, said he had turned down an offer to become Regional Affairs Minister. Mr Oakeshott said his decision to back Ms Gillard had angered some parliamentary colleagues and he knew this would make it difficult to deliver the US$9 billion ($12 billion) package for rural Australia the independents had negotiated with her. — An independent Australian politician whose support was crucial to keeping Prime Minister Julia Gillard in power on Friday knocked back an offer to become a minister in her minority government.AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:09 |
User Research/Opinions
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^ Productivity ^ [Effecacy Efficiency Economy]
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Aussie ‘kingmaker’ MP declines ministerial post
SYDNEY Country lawmaker Rob Oakeshott, one of the three independents dubbed “kingmakers” after polls gave neither Ms Gillard or the opposition enough seats to govern, said he had turned down an offer to become Regional Affairs Minister. Mr Oakeshott said his decision to back Ms Gillard had angered some parliamentary colleagues and he knew this would make it difficult to deliver the US$9 billion ($12 billion) package for rural Australia the independents had negotiated with her. — An independent Australian politician whose support was crucial to keeping Prime Minister Julia Gillard in power on Friday knocked back an offer to become a minister in her minority government.AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:07 |
User Research/Opinions
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&&&&&&&& PROFITS & PHILANTHROPHY &&&&&&&&
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Aussie ‘kingmaker’ MP declines ministerial post
SYDNEY Country lawmaker Rob Oakeshott, one of the three independents dubbed “kingmakers” after polls gave neither Ms Gillard or the opposition enough seats to govern, said he had turned down an offer to become Regional Affairs Minister. Mr Oakeshott said his decision to back Ms Gillard had angered some parliamentary colleagues and he knew this would make it difficult to deliver the US$9 billion ($12 billion) package for rural Australia the independents had negotiated with her. — An independent Australian politician whose support was crucial to keeping Prime Minister Julia Gillard in power on Friday knocked back an offer to become a minister in her minority government.AFP |
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| 11-Sep-2010 16:04 |
User Research/Opinions
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<*> Free And Free <*><*><*> Pay And Pay <*>
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Aussie ‘kingmaker’ MP declines ministerial post
SYDNEY Country lawmaker Rob Oakeshott, one of the three independents dubbed “kingmakers” after polls gave neither Ms Gillard or the opposition enough seats to govern, said he had turned down an offer to become Regional Affairs Minister. Mr Oakeshott said his decision to back Ms Gillard had angered some parliamentary colleagues and he knew this would make it difficult to deliver the US$9 billion ($12 billion) package for rural Australia the independents had negotiated with her. — An independent Australian politician whose support was crucial to keeping Prime Minister Julia Gillard in power on Friday knocked back an offer to become a minister in her minority government.AFP |
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