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BUSINESS
May 15, 2007 |
A local news website's editor who hired two reporters in India to cover Pasadena said he had been so overwhelmed by reaction to his plan that he had to postpone publication of their first stories. James Macpherson said he had not found the time he hoped to train one of his new staffers to cover Monday's City Council meeting, shown on the Web.

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WORLD
May 26, 2007 |
Gunmen seized a boatload of foreign oil workers Friday, and embassies said three Americans, four Britons and a South African were among them. The vessel, owned by a Nigerian oil-services company, was carrying the foreigners in the Niger Delta, a vast lawless region of mangrove swamps and creeks in southern Nigeria, security officials said. Nearly 200 foreign workers have been kidnapped in 18 months of attacks on oil companies and security forces in the oilfields of the Niger Delta.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
June 11, 2007 | By Teresa Watanabe,
Nicole Oswell was a straight-A student passionately interested since first grade in following in her mother's footsteps as a registered nurse. But she had to wait two years to get into Los Angeles Trade Tech's nursing program, she said, her frustration mounting as national nursing shortages worsened. Lizbeth Gutierrez got lucky. Her wait was only six months.
BUSINESS
July 8, 2007 |
Kohl's Corp. removed some styles of its Daisy Fuentes clothing line after learning of allegations that the Guatemalan factory where the clothes are made is a sweatshop, where workers are humiliated and forced to work unpaid overtime. The National Labor Committee, a New York-based workers rights group, issued a report after learning of complaints by employees at the Fribo factory in rural Santa Maria Cauque de Sacatepequez. Kohl's, based in Menomonee Falls, Wis.
BUSINESS
August 17, 2007 |
While Gap Inc.'s stores have been disappointing shoppers and investors, the factories making the retailer's clothes have been treating workers better, according to the company's latest assessment of its labor practices. The update released Thursday marked the third time the owner of the Gap, Old Navy and Banana Republic chains had publicly critiqued the conditions in overseas factories often derided as "sweatshops" because of abuses inflicted on employees.
WORLD
September 19, 2007 | By Ned Parker,
The U.S. Embassy on Tuesday banned diplomats and other civilian government employees indefinitely from traveling by land outside the heavily protected Green Zone as American and Iraqi officials debated the legal status of foreign security contractors after a weekend shooting incident here in which eight civilians were reported killed.
WORLD
December 4, 2007 | By John M. Glionna,
Edwin Maher was having a "Broadcast News" moment, feeling a flicker of self-doubt, an attack of the sweats waiting to happen beneath the white-hot studio lights. The veteran Australian TV reporter and weatherman was starting a new job abroad as a prime-time news anchor. But decades of on-camera presence couldn't prepare him for this gig, mouthing the party line for an imposing state-run TV network with armed soldiers posted at the entrance gates. He was reading the news in communist China.
BUSINESS
December 10, 2007 | By Abhay Singh and Shailendra Bhatnagar,
Behind frosted glass in rooms off-limits to anyone not cleared for access, analysts at research firm Copal Partners calculate company valuations, compile industry data and write case studies of past mergers. Their specialty is pitch books, the reports that investment banks use to win M&A deals. The Copal team is working in an office building in the New Delhi suburb of Gurgaon; its clients are Wall Street banks halfway across the globe.
NATIONAL
January 1, 2006 | By Warren Vieth,
Angelica Tellez and her family migrated to central Texas from northern Mexico in 1983, seeking a better life. Today she owns her own business, Angie's Bazaar, selling bridal gowns and \o7quinceanera\f7 dolls to Waco's burgeoning Latino community. Hers is a classic immigrant entrepreneur success story, the kind President Bush likes to cite as he tries to attract more Latinos into the Republican fold.
BUSINESS
January 20, 2006 | By Evelyn Iritani,
From the small town of Toowoomba near Australia's Gold Coast, Dennis Davey is trolling the world for people to work in his 200-person engineering company. He has snared 15 workers from South Africa and 15 more from China. Some of the South Africans have already been poached away by the town's mining companies, so if the latest batch of Chinese works out, Davey says, he will bring over at least 50 more. "We have no choice," he said in a telephone interview. "We can't find any more people."
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