500 Ladies Seek Millionaires at Hook-up Event
时间:2013-08-22 08:54:35
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China's top economic planner is conducting an anti-trust probe into several baby formula companies to investigate allegations of price fixing.
Several baby formula companies believed to have a monopoly in the Chinese market are being investigated.
Several baby formula manufacturers, including Biostime, MeadJohnson and Nestle, have been accused of violating anti-monopoly laws via high prices and limited market competition.
Companies that are found to have violated the law will be punished accordingly in order to protect the market and safeguard consumers' interests.
Global Times
500 Ladies Seek Millionaires at Hook-up Event
Over 500 single women participated in an upscale matchmaking event recently, all desperate to become wealthy housewives.
The event organizer, China Entrepreneurs' Club for Singles, claims to charge men an annual fee of 200-thousand yuan for the chance to meet a carefully selected and screened lineup of ladies.
While women are not charged a fee, the club claims to
vet1 all potential matches through rigorous rounds of written tests and interviews, including an intelligence exam, psychological
evaluation2 and a "life skill test".
Other
hurdles3 include a shirt folding contest, a luggage packing challenge, a tarot card reading and a pulse-taking by a traditional Chinese medicine
practitioner4.
Daily Mail
Internet Images of Child Abuse Double in Just a Year: 70-Thousand Sickening Pictures and Videos Discovered Online in 2012
A
horrifying5 new report has made these claims and that there has been a 70-percent increase in the number of images featuring girls under the age of 10.
It also found that there was a 125-percent increase in the number of Level 4 images - which feature sex with children - on the internet.
Its report also found that paedophiles were increasingly using sophisticated software to hide their illegal activities.
AFP
It's A Bug's Life: Microbes to Inherit The Earth
A study claims 2-billion years from now, an ever-hotter Sun will have cooked the Earth, leaving microbes confined to pockets of water in mountains or caves as the last
survivors6.
Researchers say as the Sun ages over the next billion years, it will become more
luminous7, cranking up the
thermostat8 on the Earth.
Over the second billion years, the oceans will dry up completely, leaving extremophiles -- microbial life able to cope with intense ultra-violet radiation and raging heat from the Sun -- to inherit the planet.
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