Chương trình ca nhạc trực tiếp thâu hình của Trung Tâm Asia để vui mừng 32 năm thành lập. 32 năm nhìn lại, DVD Asia 71 qui tụ hết những nghệ sĩ, ca sĩ và MC từ xưa đến nay về cùng 1 chương trình ca nhạc lớn nhất từ trước đến nay để chúc mừng cho Trung Tâm Asia. Ngày phát hành: Ngày 10 tháng 1, 2013 Mọi chi tiết xin vào Website của Trung Tâm Asia: http://trungtamasia.com Facebook: http://facebook.com/TheAsiaChannel
Jan. 3 (Bloomberg) -- On today's "Street Fighter's," US Trust Bank of America's Joe Quinlan, Bank of New York Mellon's Michael Woolfolk and Sica Wealth Management's Jeff Sica discuss central banks' monetary policies, jobs and inflation. They speak on Bloomberg Television's "Street Smart." (Source: Bloomberg)
Jan. 3 (Bloomberg) -- On today's "Three Vs. AJ," Astor Janssen's Lincoln Ellis, Strategas Research's Chris Verrone and Onestopoption.Com's Alan Knuckman look at commodities. They speak on Bloomberg Television's "Street Smart." (Source: Bloomberg)
Jan. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Cristina Alesci forecasts tomorrow's news, highlighting the big stories to be on the look for in the next trading day. She speaks on Bloomberg Television's "Bloomberg Rewind." (Source: Bloomberg)
General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Group LLC posted December U.S. vehicle sales gains that exceeded analysts’ estimates, completing a year of surprising growth that helped propel the country’s economy.
Beer is a $95bn yearly business in the United States. In the past year, however, corporate brewers have lost more of their market share to smaller, independent breweries. Some experts say this is a long-running trend. Al Jazeera's John Hendren reports from New York.
Rio De Janeiro is known for extreme traffic jams that trap cars in gridlock for hours. But now the Brazilian city is turning to old fashioned pedal power to try to ease congestion. It has set a goal to become the Latin American city with the most cycle lanes in the world. The move aims not only to improve the quality of life for its citizens, but also to do so before Rio hosts the World Cup and the Olympic Games. Al Jazeera's Lucia Newman reports from Rio de Janeiro.
Bolivia has one of the fastest rates of deforestation in the world, losing more than 300,000 hectares a year. The UN wants to give companies carbon credits in exchange for conserving trees. But the government has said no to the offer, opting to pass its own law called 'Mother Earth.' However, not everyone is happy with the new legislation, which calls for limiting farming expansion in new areas and use of only organic materials. Al Jazeera's Barbara Benitez reports.
Aid agencies in Nigeria are warning of a severe food shortage in the coming months. The 20 states affected suffered floods in October. Al Jazeera's Mohammed Adow reports from Kogi state in central Nigeria.
Portugal's economic crisis is affecting its health care system. More and more of its citizens are heading for Spain to go to the doctor or to the hospital. Read more: http://www.dw.de/program/european-journal/s-3065-9798
International news report on the ground from the France 24 team and our seniors reporters. International in-depth reports from the FRANCE 24 teams and our senior reporters from around the world. Presented by Mark Owen. Thursdays at 9.45 pm and Fridays at 10.10am.
http://www.euronews.com/ In St. Peters Square and throughout the Vatican it is cash only. All electronic payments by bank cards have been suspended and the 'hole in the wall' machines are empty.
The action has been taken due to a failure to implement anti money laundering legislation. It's a decision which has hit the thousands of visitors to the world famous Vatican Museum as one explained: "A lot of tourists don't have cash on them, so they have to get euros and don't know where to get them."
Finding clothes that fit perfectly can be a perennial problem for the fashion conscious. However, a new smartphone application developed in the UK could change that - it uses bodymetric scanning to identify your exact size and fit. If it takes off, it could revolutionise the way we buy clothes, particularly in the online sector. Jessica Baldwin reports from London.
New research has revealed an alarming spike in the number of HIV infections in Russia, with 200 people being diagnosed with the condition every day. Vadim Pokrovsky, the head of Russia's AIDS research centre, has said that instead of recognising a crisis - the government is indifferent to the problem. "If we had 200 cases of diarrhoea at a children's pioneer camp, the country's head sanitation doctor would fly out immediately to save them," Pokrovsky said. "It would be frightening. Governors would run, helicopters would fly, the police would search for the source of infection, prosecutors would get to work. "But here we are seeing that there is complete indifference to this situation." Al Jazeera's Robin Forestier-Walker reports from Moscow.
South Korea's capital Seoul is in the grip of some of the coldest January weather for nearly thirty years. The temperature dipped overnight to minus 16 degrees celsius. It is this time of year that the homeless are most vulnerable. Al Jazeera's Florence Looi reports from Seoul.
International companies often see India's billion-plus population as one of the advantages of doing business in the country. The global fast food industry was the latest to take advantage of the large number of urban consumers. But in order to survive, they had to make changes to their business strategy.
Concerns over China's food safety have made organic vegetables and fruit more and more popular among Chinese consumers. But organic food costs three to five times more than the price of regular produce. So some Shanghai residents are turning to a new farming business model, that allows them to adopt a plot of farmland and grow their own organic greens. Channel NewsAsia's Shanghai correspondent caught up with these farmers.