2021年3月31日 星期三

high climber, high rigger, tops the table, a dirigible losing altitude




USS Dirigible Akron being built 1930.






University of Chicago Booth School of Business tops the table again, while Kellogg School of Management, Stanford University and IESE Business School are high climbers


Our 2016 ranking of the world's best MBA programmes
Top 100 rankings of the best business schools. Find full-time MBA, part-time MBA, online MBA, and EMBA.

ECONOMIST.COM


As if they were aboard a dirigible losing altitude, GM's bosses have been frantically throwing all manner of stuff overboard — retiree health-care benefits, people, assets, new car design — to conserve $5 billion. That will get it through the year.

Images for high rigger





altitude
noun [C]
height above sea level:
We are currently flying at an altitude of 15 000 metres.
Mountain climbers use oxygen when they reach higher altitudes.

dir・i・gi・ble



, 
━━ a., n. 【航空】操縦しうる; 飛行船.


brigand, injured party, hurt the feelings of China's 1.4 billion people


NASA has hurt the feelings of China's 1.4 billion people with the Taiwan reference on its website, says a Beijing official.

Now that Microsoft wants to buy Yahoo, tripling its share of the search ad share and vaulting to the top of the online display ad business, maybe it doesn’t look like such an injured party.


The morning came: it was a pleasant sight to behold Mr.
Tupman in full brigand's costume, with a very tight jacket,
sitting like a pincushion over his back and shoulders, the upper
portion of his legs incased in the velvet shorts, and the lower part
thereof swathed in the complicated bandages to which all
brigands are peculiarly attached.

The Pickwick Papers


brigand 
noun [C] LITERARY
an armed thief, especially one of a group living in the countryside and stealing from people travelling through the area

injured party
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1: someone injured or killed in an accident
Synonym: casualty


injure 
verb [T]
to hurt or cause physical harm to a person or animal:
A bomb exploded at the embassy, injuring several people.
She fell and injured her shoulder.
He was badly injured in the crash.
He claimed that working too hard was injuring his health.

injured
adjective
hurt or physically harmed:
She was told to stay in bed to rest her injured back.

the injured plural noun
people who are injured, considered as a group:
The injured were taken to several nearby hospitals.

injured 
adjective
If your feelings are injured, someone has offended or upset you.

injury
noun [C or U]
physical harm or damage to someone's body caused by an accident or an attack:
a head/back/knee injury
Several train passengers received/sustained serious injuries in the crash.
Injuries to the spine are common amongst these workers.
They were lucky to escape (without) injury.


2021年3月30日 星期二

aggrieved, gigolo, hustle, hustler, or male prostitute, spurned advances, Swiss Romeo




You know, you might as well act like you’re in prison and just always have a hustle,” Scarbrough says. http://ow.ly/beE5301BOlt
Cantabrigian Hustle: Behind the Honor System Book Table Unlike…
THECRIMSON.COM



Since three state owned Chinese companies said they would buy stakes in Australia’s storied mining industry totaling $22 billion — as much as China’s entire investment here in the last three years — some of this nation’s 21.3 million people have reacted with aggrieved nationalism.

Swiss Romeo Admits Guilt in Beguiling BMW Heiress

A man who admitted wooing, swindling and trying to blackmail Germany’s richest woman was sentenced to six years in prison.

Crime | 09.03.2009

"Swiss Gigolo" Gets Six-Year Jail Sentence for Blackmailing German BMW Heiress

A smooth-talking conman known as the "Swiss Gigolo" was jailed for six years on Monday, March 9, for cheating and blackmailing a string of super-rich lovers, including Germany's wealthiest woman.

The sentence was handed down after Helg Sgarbi, known as the "Swiss Gigolo," pleaded guilty to charges of cheating and blackmailing a string of super-rich lovers, including Germany's wealthiest woman, BMW heiress Susanne Klatten.
The long list of charges covering four different women were "in essence" accurate, 44-year-old Helg Sgarbi's lawyer told the court in the German city of Munich.
This meant the four women would not have to testify against him in court.
Sgarbi, a Swiss national, was accused of cheating Klatten, 46, out of seven million euros ($8.8 million) and trying to blackmail her for 49 million euros, saying he had video footage of their steamy hotel encounters.
Three other women had allegedly fallen prey to him and voluntarily parted with millions of dollars.
"I would like to give the following statement," Sgarbi told the court, "I regret the events deeply and apologize here in this trial and in all publicity to the aggrieved women."
Klatten is the daughter of the late Herbert Quandt, the German industrialist who saved BMW from collapse in 1957 and built the Bavarian carmaker into a world auto power. The case was filed after she went to the police and exposed Sgarbi.
Klatten told tale of intricate con
Susanne KlattenBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: The trial in Munich has seized media attention
According to prosecutors, Sgarbi first met Klatten, who reputedly has a personal fortune running to several billion euros, at an exclusive Austrian health resort in July 2007.
The publicity-shy, married mother of three spurned Sgarbi's advances but began an affair when the smooth-talking Sgarbi turned up unexpectedly in the south of France where she was on holiday the following month.
Later in August 2007 they met in a Holiday Inn hotel in Munich -- where Klatten believed she would not run the risk of bumping into any acquaintances -- for an "intimate" encounter that Sgarbi secretly filmed, according to the charges.
In September they met at the same hotel and this time Sgarbi allegedly said that he needed 10 million euros because he had injured a little girl in a car crash in Florida -- asking Klatten to lend him a cool seven million euros.
Klatten swallowed his story, handing over the sum in the underground garage of the Holiday Inn in a cardboard box containing 14 plastic folders each with a thousand 500-euro banknotes.
Sgarbi then told Klatten to leave her husband and put into a trust fund 290 million euros to fund their new life together.
Klatten balked, and ended the relationship.
Blackmail causes nasty turn
A man holds a suitcase full of moneyBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Sgarbi wanted an initial 49 million euros to keep quiet
Sgarbi then turned nasty, according to prosecutors, threatening to send compromising video footage of the two together to the press and to her husband, among others.
This time he allegedly demanded 49 million euros, which he subsequently reduced to 14 million euros, and set a deadline of January 15 last year. But she had long since informed the police, and Sgarbi was arrested.
Klatten is reputedly Germany's richest woman, with a large stake in BMW as well as a chemicals firm.
Sgarbi, who has been in custody since his arrest in Vomp, Austria last year, faces four counts of serious fraud and two charges of attempted blackmail.
Media claim Sgarbi was a serial seducer who approached his wealthy victims at luxury hotels and duped them into thinking he loved them.
He persuaded them to give him millions of euros by inventing stories about needing money to pay compensation for a child he injured in a car accident.
Con artist facing prison but hoping for leniency
A German prisonBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: German law comes down hard on fraud and blackmail
German law punishes serious fraud with up to 10 years in prison and blackmail with up to 15 years.
Before Monday's hearing began, a spokesman for the Munich prosecutor's office told news channel NTV that Sgarbi faced a prison sentence of several years but that he could expect some leniency if he were to plead guilty.
"If he makes a confession, if he spares his victims from having to appear here in public, he will get a corresponding reduction ... in his sentence," Anton Winkler said.



hustle 

Pronunciation: /ˈhʌs(ə)l/ 

VERB

1[WITH OBJECT] Push roughly; jostle:they were hissed and hustled as they went in
1.1[WITH OBJECT AND ADVERBIAL OF DIRECTION] Force (someone) to move hurriedly or unceremoniously:I was hustled away to a cold cell
1.2[NO OBJECT, WITH ADVERBIAL OF DIRECTION] Push one’s way; bustle:Stockwell hustled into the penalty area
2[WITH OBJECT] informal, chiefly North American Obtain illicitly or by forceful action:Linda hustled money from men she met
2.1(hustle someone into) Pressure someone into doing something:don’t be hustled into anything unless you really want to
2.2Sell aggressively:he hustled his company’s oil around the country

3[NO OBJECT] North American informal Engage in prostitution:she would hustle for a few dollars

NOUN

1[MASS NOUN] A state of great activity:the hustle and bustle of the big cities
2North American informal A fraud or swindle:the hustles being used to avoid the draft

spurn
verb [T] SLIGHTLY FORMAL
to refuse to accept something or someone because you feel that they are not worth having:
She spurned my offers of help.
Ellis plays the part of the young lover spurned by his mistress.


Male prostitution is the sale of sexual services (prostitution) by a male (a gigolo, hustler, or male prostitute). The gender of the customer and the sexual act(s) or sexual behavior that the prostitute engages in with that person may not correspond to the prostitute's own sexual orientation.[1][2] Compared to female sex workers, male sex workers have been far less studied by researchers, and while studies suggest that there are differences between the ways these two groups look at their work, more research is needed.[3]

advance


n.
  1. The act or process of moving or going forward.
  2. A forward move, as toward an objective; a progressive step: an advance in genetic engineering.
  3. An increase of price or value.
  4. advances Opening approaches made to secure acquaintance, favor, or an agreement; overtures.
    1. The furnishing of funds or goods on credit.
    2. The funds or goods so furnished; a loan.
    1. Payment of money before due: an advance on next month's salary.
    2. The money so paid.
  5. Preparation, especially publicity, done prior to the appearance of a public figure or the staging of a public event.
aggrieved
adj.
  1. Feeling distress or affliction.
  2. Treated wrongly; offended.
  3. Law. Treated unjustly, as by denial of or infringement upon one's legal rights.
aggrievedly ag·griev'ed·ly (ə-grē'vĭd-lē) adv.
aggrievedness ag·griev'ed·ness n.

onshore, feed-in tariffs, state-run, veep, program, sienna

"It's economically unrealistic for all the countries to build additional chip production capacity," says chairman of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world's biggest contract chipmaker.

Restrictions on fracking in Britain were lifted in 2012, but no onshore sites have been drilled in the past three years. Why not? http://econ.st/1G2R660


Enough to make you veep

Mitt Romney is about to discover how hard it is to choose a running-mate


23 (Bloomberg) -- CPC Corp., a Taiwan state-run oil company, bought 6 million barrels of Angolan crude for loading in April via a tender, according to two traders who participate in the market. The company bought three cargoes of Cabinda, two shipments ...


Taiwan Reduces Solar Power Feed-In Tariffs 30% for 2011 as Costs Decline


Taiwan reduced the feed-in tariffs for solar power for 2011 contracts by about 30 percent from last year’s level because of the falling cost of installing equipment that converts sunlight into energy.
State-run 國營 Taiwan Power Co. will pay NT$7.33 (25 cents) a kilowatt-hour for power generated from ground solar panels, compared with NT$11.12 for 2010, the Ministry of Economic Affairs said in a statement today. The 2011 price for roof-top solar power is as high as NT$10.32.
Solar cell prices may decline 10 percent to 15 percent this year, said Chang Ping-heng, chief executive officer of Motech Industries Inc., Taiwan’s biggest solar cell maker by market value. Global annual capacity to produce solar cells may climb to as much as 30 gigawatts in 2011, Chang said Dec. 1. The estimate exceeds 2011 global demand projection from technology researcher Isuppli by about 35 percent.
“Solar power costs may fall further,” Hwang Jung-chiou, vice minister of economic affairs, said in a press conference in Taipei today.
The new floor price is NT$2.61 for electricity generated by wind, the ministry said. The government aims to have 100 megawatts of onshore wind power capacity and 70 megawatts of photovoltaic panels installed this year, it said.
Prices Paid
Feed-in tariffs, or the prices paid to generators by Taiwan Power, the island’s monopoly grid operator, are at least NT$11.12 per kilowatt-hour for photovoltaic solar panels installed in 2010 and NT$2.38 for wind farms, the Bureau of Energy said in a statement on its website in December 2009. That compared with an average cost of NT$2.06 per kilowatt-hour for fossil fuels such as coal and oil.
Taiwan’s government set feed-in tariffs for electricity generated by solar panels and wind turbines at higher levels than for those for power from fossil fuels to spur production of renewable energy. President Ma Ying-jeou, who took office in May 2008, has pledged to cut emissions to 2000 levels by 2025. Lawmakers approved the island’s Renewable Energy Development Act in 2009.



sienna (see-EN-uh)

noun: A color derived from clay, ranging from yellowish brown (in raw form) to reddish brown (when roasted).

Etymology
From Italian terra di Siena (earth of Siena). After Siena, a city in Italy once noted for the mining of this mineral. In its roasted form, the color is known as burnt sienna.

Usage
"Once you plow through the manual, you can program all your preferred settings, meaning the oven will remember just which shade of sienna you like your toast." — Melissa Clark; Compact Cookery; The New York Times; Aug 24, 2005.


Americans Hate Gov't, Love Its Programs
Americans have a very negative view of the government yet they think Social Security and Medicare are very important and want lawmakers to keep spending to try to boost jobs.



 veep
 noun, US

A vice-president. (1949 —) .
Fortune His Makati business club constituents would be happy to nominate E.Z. for veep (1983).


onshore,
Pronunciation: /ˈɒnʃɔː/ 

Definition of onshore in English:

adjectiveadverb

1Situated or occurring on land (often used in relation to the oil and gas industry):[AS ADJECTIVE]: an onshore oilfield
1.1(Especially of the wind) from the sea towards the land:a slight onshore breeze[AS ADVERB]:  we moved onshore

verb

[WITH OBJECT]Back to top  
(Of a company) transfer (a business operation that was moved overseas) back to the country from which it was originally relocated:the case study showed improvement in many keyareas once the company decided to onshore its call centre activity