DirectoryMix Web Resources » Article Details

China tallies losses, costs from quake - Read More

Date Added: May 16, 2008 07:16:02 PM
Cracked dams and buckled roads, collapsed buildings and toppled factories _ China has begun to tally its losses from an earthquake this week that killed thousands and left thousands more missing, with estimates ranging to over $20 billion. It remains unknown...

Category: Business & Economy » Buildings and Factories


No comments are posted yet


 
Name:*
Email:*
Website:  (optional)
Comment:*
(html and bb codes are filtered and not allowed)

Do the math:*CAPTCHA - Do The Math
 

Related Articles

HL:The Canadian Press Business News Budget for Friday, June 13, 2008@

The Canadian Press Business coverage plans as of 7 p.m. ET. Plans may change as circumstances warrant. Queries should be addressed to business editor John Valorzi at 416-507-2146 or to David Paddon on the business desk at 416-507-2138 or Craig Wong at 613

Bright lights, a bigger city

THE view across the Brisbane River from the South Bank cultural precinct is a mess: a tangle of concrete roads masking a couple of heritage buildings at one end and, at the other, the grey institutional ugliness of the Queensland University of Technology

South Africa: Xenophobia And the Working Class

To convey the reasons and effects of xenophobia in South Africa and its effect on the working class, Thandokuhle Manzi and Patrick Bond take a microscopic look at Cato Manor Township, one of the sites where the attacks took place.

Your Town Marshfield: What Makes Marshfield DoorSystems a World Wide Leader

Marshfield DoorSystems is capitalizing on one of Wisconsin's most abundant resources and is doing it in an environmentally friendly way. In recent weeks Marshfield DoorSystems has produced as many as 18,000 to 19,000 doors a week.

AP Financial NewsBrief at 5:12 a.m. EDT

DETROIT (AP) _ General Motors Corp.'s top managers are working on additional restructuring measures to deal with a declining U.S. auto market and an accelerated shift from trucks to more fuel efficient vehicles, a person familiar with the plan told The A