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Read The Interesting Snippets Below For Exciting Merchant Cash Advance News!
The Hardest Places to Live in the U.S.
– http://nytimes.com/ny
Breakingviews: Barclays falls back into deep end
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
Continue Reading On http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness »
Higher prices lift Lennar's revenue
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
Continue Reading On http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness »
GM prepares recall of top selling North American car
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
Continue Reading On http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness »
DealBook: Alibaba, Chinese Internet Giant, Picks N.Y.S.E. for Its Listing
– http://nytimes.com/ny
The choice is a major victory for the exchange, for what is expected to be one of the biggest initial public offerings in years. Alibaba’s ticker symbol will be “BABA.”Fox Joins Network Brethren in Wrapping Up Its ‘Upfront’ Ad Sales
– http://nytimes.com/ny
Carney Details New Weapons to Cool British Housing Market
– http://nytimes.com/ny
The moves announced by the governor of the Bank of England would restrict large mortgage loans as a way to curb market distortions.What’s the Matter With Eastern Kentucky?
– http://nytimes.com/ny
[Buzz_Burner_Fresh_Updates]

The department said that Dr. Robert L. Jesse, the acting under secretary for health, and Will A. Gunn, the general counsel, would be leaving.
The 8th Estate winery was on the verge of turning a profit when it lost half its space in Hong Kong.
The owner considered three options: maintaining caregivers as employees but increasing the cost of home care for clients, turning employees into independent contractors or transforming the company into a broker that would be paid finder’s fees only.
To realize the greatest benefits from exercise, we probably need to ramp up our workouts.
The search engine behemoth announced plans to incorporate its Android operating system in categories like wearable computers and autos.
A crosshatch of stock holdings allows Japan’s big corporations to protect one another from outside attempts to shake up management. The prime minister has taken aim at the practice.
The Obama administration has drawn up plans to escalate sanctions against Russia by targeting its financial, energy and defense industries.
Construction has taken off in the area once known as Tysons Corner as developers anticipate the arrival of the Washington Metro’s new Silver Line.
The United States Preventive Services Task Force decided not to recommend routine testing for vitamin D levels in part because it was not clear whether otherwise healthy adults with low levels actually benefit from taking supplements of the vitamin.
A crosshatch of stock holdings allows Japan’s big corporations to protect one another from outside attempts to shake up management. The prime minister has taken aim at the practice.
Dov Charney’s dismissal raises all sorts of thorny corporate-governance questions for investors and boards about iconic — and notorious — leaders, especially in creative fields.
JetBlue’s new premium service between New York and Los Angeles, called Mint, is a departure from its egalitarian image.
The Manhattan district attorney’s office is using the Martin Act in its investigation of the financing of a New Jersey bridge repair.
A study finds that after early adolescence the social status of socially precocious teenagers often plummeted.
A daughter’s admission that during a bad headache things around her looked smaller led to a discovery of a rare syndrome in one family.
The causes of an unexpected decrease in labor participation include caring for others and the significant drop in state and local government employment.
The United States Preventive Services Task Force decided not to recommend routine testing for vitamin D levels in part because it was not clear whether otherwise healthy adults with low levels actually benefit from taking supplements of the vitamin.
At long-term acute care facilities, the point is rarely recovery. It’s to keep going, regardless of the cost. But misery doesn’t define such places.
Many companies insure their employees’ lives with themselves as beneficiaries, a practice some deride as immoral. But companies say the policies, for which they get tax breaks, help them bolster pensions and health care.
Extreme heat claims American lives each year, and with climate change, some experts predict the number will rise.
New products and social media services have arisen to help people take better pictures of themselves with the aid of the flying robots.
Many companies insure their employees’ lives with themselves as beneficiaries, a practice some deride as immoral. But companies say the policies, for which they get tax breaks, help them bolster pensions and health care.
At first glance, “The Last Magazine: A Novel” by Michael Hastings would appear to lack relevance in the current media age, but even from the grave Mr. Hastings has demonstrated anew an ability to reframe the debate.
The automaker is nearly ready to begin compensating those left injured by the defective ignition switches that led to the recall of 2.6 million vehicles.
An internal investigation found that the company’s chief executive had allowed the posting of naked pictures of a female employee who had sued him.
The approval of the $13.5 billion deal essentially brings the long acquisition negotiations to an end, though a final deal hinges on the French state buying Alstom shares.
Abundant data, smart software and cheap sensors are beginning to make it possible to measure and monitor employees as never before.
An internal investigation found that the company’s chief executive had allowed the posting of naked pictures of a female employee who had sued him.
The story of Shanesha Taylor, a mother who had a job interview but was unable to find child care, shows the harsh realities of today’s economy.
The approval of the $13.5 billion deal essentially brings the long acquisition negotiations to an end, though a final deal hinges on the French state buying Alstom shares.
The story of Shanesha Taylor, a mother who had a job interview but was unable to find child care, shows the harsh realities of today’s economy.
Sports talk in the workplace, whether about the World Cup or the World Series, can exclude and alienate some employees.
When a family saves for future generations, it provides resources to finance capital investments, like the start-up of new businesses and the expansion of old ones.
With a huge audience but declining ad revenue, the company is pinning its revival on a constellation of sites, where news and advertising intertwine.
Abundant data, smart software and cheap sensors are beginning to make it possible to measure and monitor employees as never before.
The tumultuous case of Sergey Aleynikov has taken another turn as a New York judge throws out most of the evidence against him.
The government of François Hollande backed General Electric’s offer to buy part of Alstom, the French industrial conglomerate, shutting out Siemens and Mitsubishi.
Behind the image of savagery that the extremists of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria present lies a disciplined organization that employs social media and sophisticated financial strategies.
In a surprise move, the French government will also buy a 20 percent stake in Alstom, becoming its largest shareholder.
The first commercial for the Nabi DreamTab, a computer tablet for children, is expected to be introduced on July 7.
The goal is to sustain team enthusiasm when people are working hard, often late at night and on weekends, to release a product they will probably have to redo repeatedly until it’s right.
The so-called community solar garden was pioneered in Colorado, and is appealing to people who have no roof space, like renters and apartment owners, or homeowners with shady roofs.
As the Fed curtails the expansion of its enormous portfolio, its reinvesting of maturing securities may continue to help the economy.
After years of negative press, the board of American Apparel ousted Mr. Charney as chairman and chief executive.
G.E. is not altering the financial valuation of the $13.5 billion deal, but it is now proposing to create two joint ventures with Alstom: one in the power grid business and another in renewable energy.
Cellphone theft has been a growing problem. But police in several major cities say they are finally starting to see a dip in thefts of one of the most popular smartphones, Apple’s iPhone.
If it succeeds, the city’s cost-cutting hybrid pension plan could be a model for solving government budget crises across the country.
The world needed a great, cheap smartphone, and Amazon seems uniquely capable of delivering such a device. But the Fire instead aims at a saturated high end.
A dispute between Argentina and several New York hedge funds is returning to Federal District Court in Manhattan to negotiate.
In treating people with high blood pressure, most experts believe that “the lower the better.” But a new study suggests that there are limits beyond which there is no benefit.
According to regulatory filings in Britain, the Children’s Investment Fund, known as TCI, will no longer donate money to the foundation on a contractual basis, though it may do so on a discretionary basis.
The company’s chief executive has been rethinking his business model. Entering 2014, he believed he had three options.
If it succeeds, the city’s cost-cutting hybrid pension plan could be a model for solving government budget crises across the country.
The wireless carrier’s chief executive says a potential merger with Sprint would intensify the kind of innovation T-Mobile announced on Wednesday.
Frequent exercise may influence our weight and overall health by altering the kinds of organisms that live inside of us, a new study suggests.
The Internet company joins Google, LinkedIn and a host of older tech companies in disclosing the gender and ethnic breakdown of its work force.
If it succeeds, the city’s cost-cutting hybrid pension plan could be a model for solving government budget crises across the country.
Simple precautions can prevent a nasty reaction from contact with poison ivy and related plants, which can harm even those who have had previous uneventful exposures.
The president of the American Hospice Foundation offers some questions to ask when selecting hospice care.
The White House unveiled a program that will provide entrepreneurs access to more than $5 billion in advanced manufacturing equipment.
In many states, doctors are notifying women who are found to have dense breast tissue. But there is no clear medical guidance on what they should do next.
How do you feed two children in a family when one is overweight and one is underweight?
What does being a fun dad really mean? From moonwalks to early-morning sandwich-making, our readers share their stories of dads who put the fun in fatherhood.
Brad Katsuyama, chief of the IEX Group who was featured in Michael Lewis’s recent book “Flash Boys,” voiced more measured criticisms of the market in testimony prepared for a Senate hearing.
Royal Dutch Shell said on Tuesday that it would offload the majority of its stake in Woodside Petroleum, Australia’s biggest independent oil and natural gas producer, in a deal worth $5.7 billion.
The entertainment company’s DreamHouse product will feature giant video screens and a virtual sleigh ride with Shrek.
Two professors have evidence of what has long been suspected: Insider trading is common, arising from perhaps a quarter of all public company deals.
How do you feed two children in a family when one is overweight and one is underweight?
Such tissue makes it hard to read mammograms, and additional tests like ultrasounds and M.R.I.s may not help much.
Simple precautions can prevent a nasty reaction from contact with poison ivy and related plants, which can harm even those who have had previous uneventful exposures.
Siemens and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries formally presented a counteroffer for Alstom, but their combined bid was less than what General Electric was offering.
Two professors have evidence of what we’ve long suspected: Insider trading is common, arising from perhaps a quarter of all public company deals.