comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - எலியட் ஸ்டீன் - Page 1 : comparemela.com

Citigroup fights for freeze on $500M it sent in blunder

Wall Street math shows ESG funds can ride the value stock boom S&P 500 trades near record in slow trading session Paul Gardner s Top Picks: April 8, 2021 Topps looks to go public in US$1.3B deal with SPAC Stan Wong s Top Picks: April 7, 2021 Stocks rise after Fed minutes as volume dwindles The Daily Chase: Alberta, Ontario toughen COVID rules; 1 in 5 hoping for home-price crash Paul Harris Top Picks: April 6, 2021 With US$1 trillion of distress gone, debt pickers find scraps The Robinhood generation is debating old school investors on trading stocks Stocks decline in slowest trading day of this year Larry Berman: S&P 500 earnings expectations rise into sell-in-May rally

Frames per Second: The strange career of Kissa Kursi Ka

Poster of Kissa Kursi Ka In a longish feature for Film Comment (May-June 1980), American journalist Elliott Stein wrote about the forays made by Indian film personalities into politics. “In no country are cinema and politics more closely intertwined,” he noted. Some of the events, he noted while covering Filmotsav ’80, a film festival held in Bangalore (now Bengaluru), were M.G.R becoming the chief minister of Tamil Nadu in 1977, Dilip Kumar being appointed the sheriff of Bombay (now Mumbai), and the successful launch and quick folding up of a new National Party by Dev Anand. “One case of Indian politics-cum-film received world attention because it involved Sanjay Gandhi,” wrote Stein. “In 1977, Amrit Nahata, the producer of Kissa Kursi Ka brought a suit against Mrs Gandhi’s son, claiming that he had stolen and destroyed all of the prints of the film, which caricatured his mother’s regime.”

Credit Suisse Pays $600 Million to Settle U S Mortgage Case

Credit Suisse Pays $600 Million to Settle U.S. Mortgage Case This content was published on February 12, 2021 - 14:32 February 12, 2021 - 14:32 (Bloomberg) Credit Suisse Group AG agreed to pay $600 million to settle a lawsuit over mortgage securities that collapsed in the 2008 financial crisis, an accord that locks in an expected hit to its profit. The plaintiff, MBIA Insurance Corp., said late Thursday that it had reached an agreement, after a post-trial court decision that ordered the Swiss bank to pay about $604 million in damages. The settlement means there will be no appeal trial. Credit Suisse is expecting to post a fourth-quarter loss when it reports earnings on Feb. 18, after setting aside $850 million for U.S. legal cases including MBIA and booking a $450 million impairment on a hedge fund investment.

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.