AmazIng: Of the U.S.’s total $125 billion in exports to China in 2020, officials required a license for less than h… https://t.co/BPppfL51Xm— 1 hour 11 min ago via@theofrancis
The gender wage gap starts early: Men earned more than women soon after graduating—with the same degree—in nearly 7… https://t.co/UQb6o8ZZnf— 1 week 1 day ago via@theofrancis
The era of the kinder, gentler CEO is fading. As the economy worsens, corporate chiefs are bringing back blunt talk… https://t.co/JSqfPPtJZX— 1 week 6 days ago via@theofrancis
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From the marbled corridors of Congress to the tony salons of Georgetown, liberal lawmakers are abuzz with ideas on how to rein in U.S. corporations. Yet over in the courts, two conservative lawyers are mounting a serious challenge to a law, enacted earlier in the decade, that imposed tough restrictions on American businesses.
Since Jasmine Nguyen collapsed nine years ago, apparently from a seizure, the 32-year-old has lived in a nursing home in Lodi, Calif., dependent on a ventilator to breathe and the facility's staff for her daily needs.
After her fiance died suddenly, Patricia Galvin left New York for San Francisco in 1996 and took a job as a tax lawyer for a large law firm. A few years later, she began confiding to a psychologist at Stanford Hospital &Clinics about her relationships with family, friends and co-workers.