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Posts Tagged ‘winning’

Ziwo extends winning streak, +2.5%; $0.45 cap – UOB

Ziwo Holdings (I9T.SG) +2.5% at $0.410 with a heavy 13.8 million shares traded, extending gains over the last 3 sessions to 10.8% after the company late December 29 said it had obtained approval from the Singapore stock exchange to extend the deadline for the placement of new shares (in conjunction with its proposed TDR listing) to 31 January 2011. 

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Zardari told US “we are here because of you” after winning elections

Asif Ali ZardariPakistan President Asif Ali Zardari had thanked the United States government for its support of credible parliamentary elections, which brought his Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) to power in September 2008, according to some classified US diplomatic cables released by whistleblower website Wikileaks. In a cable about a meeting of US Representatives, Adam Schiff and Allyson [...]

Forex Bigbang The Winning Formula Posted By : forexbig

There are lots of opportunities we all have all day. Some of us avail opportunities and some dont. However there are some opportunities which we all must avail because if they are not availed then there is repentance.

Musharraf has “very slim chances” of winning democratic elections in Pak: Holbrooke

Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf has “very slim” chances of regaining power in the 2013 elections, and any return to military rule in the country would be a disaster, a senior US official said on Wednesday. “He has about as much chance of coming back to power as (former Soviet) President (Mikhail) Gorbachev,” The News [...]

STX Pan Ocean gains after winning 25-year contract

STX Pan Ocean Co., South Korea’s largest bulk-shipping company, gained the most in almost two weeks in Seoul trading after receiving a 25-year contract from Fibria Celulose SA of Brazil.

The company rose 2.4%, the biggest increase since Oct. 7, to close at 12,700 won in Seoul. The company’s Singapore-listed shares climbed 2.9% to close at $14.76.

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MAS pledges more action after winning share rigging suit

Singapore’s central bank said its victory in the country’s first civil lawsuit for stock rigging against fund manager Tan Chong Koay and Pheim Asset Management Sdn. shows its determination to enforce market rules.

Tan and his Malaysian fund management company were fined $250,000 each for manipulating United Envirotech’s share price in December 2004 to maintain their performance benchmarks and boost their reputation, according to a Sept 17 ruling by Justice Lai Siu Chiu.

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Dell Winning, Oracle Losing as Server Spending Slows, TheInfoPro Finds

According to a survey by TheInfoPro, spending on servers will continue to be slow in 2010 as businesses contend with tight IT infrastructure budgets and as virtualization adoption grows. Dell is getting much attention from cash-strapped businesses, while Oracle is most vulnerable with this trend, TheInfoPro says. – Server vendors will continue to see a harsh business climate as enterprises
adapt to the new fiscal realities, and while Dell and Cisco Systems may ride
out the storm well, Oracle could see its hardware plans battered, according to
a report by market research company TheInfoPro.
In its latest se…


ABC winning the online ratings war Posted By : Paddy Chang

Live Internet TV | Online TV technology allows you to watch over 4,500 HD channels right on your PC.

Max Keiser: Big Banks Allocate Losing Trades to Clients, Keep Winning Trades for Themselves

Max Keiser – journalist, former Wall Street broker and options trader, and inventor of the software which is now being used for high frequency trading – claims that the big banks retroactively allocate losing trades to their clients, and keep the winni…

STI may snap recent winning streak; 2,950 support

STI’s attempts to head above 3,000 mark, last tested in June 2008, may stall temporarily with investors taking breather in wake of Wall Street’s overnight losses, says Dow Jones.

Index closed 0.4% higher for fourth straight session at new year-to-date high of 2,988.10, +8.6% since beginning March. Support tipped at this week’s low of 2,950.

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Cilic overcomes Clement to continue winning streak

Croatia’s Marin Cilic continued his winning ways this year by defeating Arnaud Clement of France 6-2, 6-4 to reach the second round of the Barclays Dubai Tennis Championships on yesterday. The number six seed has now won 16 matches this year with titles in Chennai and Zagreb, with his only

The Winning Edge Posted By : Mark Conran

A company would be in total disorder without some form of accounting in place. These systems need not be complicated and could be as simple as noting down the debits and credits for the day.

The winning habit

Abu Dhabi Grand Prix   This year saw the UAE host its first Grand Prix as the world of Formula One descended on Yas Island. There was disappointment the championship was not decided in the Emirates as Jenson Button won his first title at the penultimate race in Brazil, but nevertheless all eyesAbu Dhabi Grand Prix This year saw the UAE host its first Grand Prix as the world of Formula One descended on Yas Island. There was disappointment the championship was not decided in the Emirates as Jenson Button won his first title at the penultimate race in Brazil, but nevertheless all eyes

Lil Wayne to be dad for fourthRapper Lil Wayne is to become dad for the fourth time. According to E!Online, 27-year-old singer Nivea is pregnant with the “Lollipop” singer’s fourth kid. This child would be the third son in about a year for the 27-year-old Wayne (real name Dwayne Michael Carter Jr.), reports Us magazine. Wayne’s first son was born to a woman – whose identity has not been made public – last October. His second son, Lennox Samuel Ari, was born to actress Lauren London in September 2009. The Grammy award winning hip-hop artist is also father to a daughter, Reginae, nine, from ex-wife Antonia Carter. time

Rapper Lil Wayne is to become dad for the fourth time.
According to E!Online, 27-year-old singer Nivea is pregnant with the “Lollipop” singer’s fourth kid.
This child would be the third son in about a year for the 27-year-old Wayne (real name Dwayne Michael Carter Jr.), reports Us magazine.
Wayne’s first son was born to a woman – [...]

The Nobel science prizes: Winning ways

Prizes for optical fibres, charge-coupled devices, ribosomes and telomeres

HOW do you look through a window that is 100km thick? That, in essence, was the question facing Charles Kao in 1966. For working out the answer, Dr Kao has been awarded part of this year’s Nobel prize for physics. Besides being thick, the window was narrow: it was an optical fibre. Dr Kao’s prize is a belated recognition of his contribution to the telecommunications revolution of the past few decades. But better late than never.

The rest of the physics prize goes almost as belatedly to Willard Boyle and George Smith who, in 1969, ushered the charge-coupled device (CCD) into being, paving the way for the digital camera. The chemistry prize went to Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, Thomas Steitz and Ada Yonath for working out the structure of ribosomes—the parts of living cells that translate genetic information into proteins. And the physiology prize went to Elizabeth Blackburn, Carol Greider and Jack Szostak for their work on telomeres, the DNA caps that stop the ends of chromosomes either unravelling or sticking to one another. …

Sing when you’re winning

To Colin Syn, the inaugural Singapore Grand Prix will forever be remembered for exceeding expectations – the "jewel in the F1 crown" as Sir Frank Williams, team principal of Williams, put it last year. "Crashgate" has been an unnecessary sideshow.  The deputy chairman of the Grand Prix is rightTo Colin Syn, the inaugural Singapore Grand Prix will forever be remembered for exceeding expectations – the “jewel in the F1 crown” as Sir Frank Williams, team principal of Williams, put it last year. “Crashgate” has been an unnecessary sideshow. The deputy chairman of the Grand Prix is right

Roulette Betting Software Winning Roulette Betting Strategy Posted By : Rick Lee

Roulette is probably the easiest casino game to understand but also the most difficult to master. Winning in roulette can bring you thousands of dollars every day, but on the same side losing it can drain your pocket a lot.

Nobel Prize Winning Economist Says Obama is Making the Same Mistakes as Policymakers Made During the Great Depression

Charles Rowley of George Mason University and Nathanael Smith of the Locke Institute say that Obama is committing the same mistakes that policymakers made during the Great Depression.Specifically, Rowley and Smith say: The policy responses to the de…

Dusty Rhodes: Winning You Over

By: Mike Bookey

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band by Brent Murrell

Getting hit by a pickup truck is a categorically bad thing. That’s just a rule of life, physics and motor vehicle safety. However, if it weren’t for an absent-minded driver that smashed into a scooter-riding young man earlier this decade, there’s a good chance that the planet would never get to know, and fall increasingly in love with, Dusty Rhodes and the River Band. Riding home from work in Anaheim, CA on the Honda Elite scooter that he’d purchased from his grandmother with his high school graduation money, Dustin Apodaca drove into an intersection when the driver of a pickup truck ran a red light and slammed into him so hard that his helmeted head left a sizeable dent in the hood of the truck.

This is the part of the story where you’d expect to hear about how this resilient youngster fought against adversity, relearning to walk or maybe finding musical inspiration in his new lease on life that urged him to reach for rock & roll stardom. Well, this isn’t one of those stories. This is about a kid who wanted to have a killer band and just needed something like, say, an insurance settlement to get him properly outfitted. You see, Apodaca wasn’t seriously hurt in the accident.

“At first all I had was a guitar, but when I got hit by a truck I was like, ‘Yes!’ and I got like four keyboards and a nice big box Buckingham amp. I got an accordion, too, and a van – a 1987 Mitsubishi. It was so cool looking; it was like a starship,” says Apodaca from his home in Orange County. “If it wasn’t for me getting hit by a car, we probably wouldn’t be doing this.”

Now, Apodaca doesn’t only have a new scooter but he’s also part of that killer band he was looking to get off the ground. Anaheim’s Dusty Rhodes and the River Band isn’t a twangy gang of burned-out hippies relegated to cowboy bars, as the name might suggest, but rather a young, genre-smashing six-piece (all of them in their twenties) that takes all the energy of power pop and melts it together with its members’ collective love for classic rock, folk, gospel and other shades of American roots music. In late May, the band rolled out its second record, Palace and Stage (released May 17 on Side One Dummy Records), a collection of tightly wound, powerful cuts ranging from pop-rock to folk to all out rockers. The record showcases a band with the crossover ability and musical smarts of an act like The Decemberists, but with the explosive rocking power of (and this is going to seem strange, but it’s true) Electric Light Orchestra. Just listen to the first cut on the album, “All One,” and that comparison should make instant sense.

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band from myspace.com

“We tried to make it super focused, but obviously we can’t do that, so it’s still a little different on each track. We tried to bring it in, tighten it up and make it more of a rock album, more straight up POW!” says Apodaca, making just one of the many sound effects he unleashed during the conversation.

Apodaca is almost never serious, speaking in about five different phony voices during our conversations, always employing the “and they were all like… then, I went” mode of storytelling. He’s a goddamn pleasure to speak with, even if there are several moments when it’s mostly impossible to tell if he’s serious… about anything other than playing rock music. On stage, it’s similar. He keeps his curly mop of hair bouncing for the entirety of the show, often stepping back from the mic for delightfully obnoxious handclaps. His stage presence might remind some of a seemingly impossible combination of the Crowes’ Chris Robinson and a less-mobile James Brown, but he’s likely more inspired by whatever could possibly be running through his head at that moment.

Apodaca is one of rock music’s rare keyboard-playing frontmen, a position he says (not quite believably) wouldn’t be the case if he had more keyboards and would need to stand in a corner of the stage. After a youth spent playing guitar in punk bands, Apodaca decided, while still a teenager, that he needed to be on the keys.

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band from myspace.com

“My parents had just got cable and VH1 Classic had just come out. I was maybe 16 and they had this live show with Rick Wakeman [Yes] freakin’ on ice. It was so cool it changed my life. I was like, ‘I’m not playing guitar. I’m not playing bass. I’m playing synthesizers and that is it.’ And that’s because of Rick Wakeman,” he says.

And thus Apodaca became the only 16-year-old in 1999 to become an infatuated Yes fan and synthesizer enthusiast.

At an outdoor street festival show in Bend, Oregon this past June, with a cold wind whipping between downtown buildings like summer has turned back to spring, Apodaca is wearing a classically ’80s black-and-red windbreaker and sitting backstage sipping a beer he plucked from what appears to be an old bowling bag. We’re talking in vague terms about music, and soon Apodaca uses the expression “too cool for night school” to refer to the hipper-than-thou-unless-you-have-the-most-recent-leaked-album ethos that is omnipresent in music clubs these days.

A month later, I ask him about the phrase over the phone because it seems like it might apply to those who don’t quite get Dusty Rhodes and the River Band, people who, perhaps rightfully so, are pretty damn confused by this act. He laughs, as is his wont, and tries to clarify himself, saying that he wasn’t knocking anyone in particular but rather the whole idea of how buzz-happy music fans can be and how his band has chosen a more built-to-last approach. “In a career, it’s better that way because people will keep coming back,” says Apodaca. “If you’re a fluke or a buzz, people are like, ‘They’re cool, but, next.’”

Continue reading for more on Dusty Rhodes and the River Band…

 


At first all I had was a guitar, but when I got hit by a truck I was like, ‘Yes!’ and I got like four keyboards and a nice big box Buckingham amp. I got an accordion, too, and a van – a 1987 Mitsubishi. It was so cool looking; it was like a starship. If it wasn’t for me getting hit by a car, we probably wouldn’t be doing this.

-Dustin Apodaca

 

Photo by: Matt Grayson

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band
By Jake Krolick

The band’s debut, First You Live, was a solid release, even if it was even more diverse than Palace and Stage, including a couple straight-up country songs. But where the band has earned its credibility over the past five years has been on stage, where Apodaca serves as a gyrating focal point, though several other members take lead vocal duties and also show off skills of their own. Guitarists Kyle Divine and Edson Choi both throw impressive licks, and also take the lead vocal duties from time to time as Andrea Babinski (her brother Brad Babinski plays bass) provides the lone female voice as well as violin and mandolin, adding another layer to an already thick mix anchored by drummer Eric Chirco.

At the show in Bend, the band kicked off with a medley of cuts from Palace and Stage then peppered in a few rootsier, almost honky-tonk numbers from First You Live. Then, they do something that pretty much sums up this band – they launch into a cover of “The Weight” by The Band, trading verses between band members, all of them returning to shout out the chorus with the crowd joining in. Next, they cruise through a string of more pop-rock influenced tunes, yet the people who’ve flocked to the stage during “The Weight” don’t leave and are still dancing along. This is typical for Dusty Rhodes, a band that has opened for Flogging Molly AND Jonny Lang, as well as Blind Melon and Los Lobos, and can also headline a street festival like this or fit in perfectly at jammy gatherings like Wakarusa and High Sierra, as they did this summer, gaining across-the-board positive reviews (read JamBase’s review of Dusty Rhodes at HSMF here).

Dustin Apodaca by Max Knies

Kyle Divine, the slender guitarist who is wearing a mustache, oversized glasses and a hoodie bearing the name of label mate Gogol Bordello when we meet, says that the band’s accessibility has been both a blessing and a curse. On one hand, they sometimes fall by the wayside without a genre to nestle into, but conversely, they can pretty much play anywhere and be accepted. It’s a weird place to be in, and Divine realizes that.

“We’ve always just been about playing anywhere, anytime for whatever crowd because we know we can win them over wherever we are,” says Divine, “I think it’s because we have so many influences of our own that we appreciate all kinds of music.”

Neither Divine nor Apodaca is a fan of the band’s name, which has provided them with some strange experiences, including but hardly limited to playing with cowboy band openers and also having their lead singer mistakenly introduced as “Dusty Rhodes,” which, of course, isn’t his real name. The band’s genesis came after Apodaca and Divine met when Apodaca was taking a community college screen-printing class with Divine’s roommate. “This is where brilliant minds come together, in screen-printing class at a community college,” Apodaca says of the experience, pointing out that Divine was his scholastic superior, enrolled at Cal State Fullerton at the time. They originally wanted to name the band Dusty Rhodes and the Santa Ana River Band, in honor of both the brand name of Dustin’s old electric piano and the concrete sludge canal near their hometown, but decided it was too long. Never fans of the name, the band actually wanted to change their name with the release of Palace and Stage, which, for obvious reasons, wasn’t realistic.

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band by Brent Murrell

“We did want to change it and we still do. But, when you’re 19 you make up ridiculous names, you know, so we just kind of stuck with it,” says Apodaca, who in the band’s earlier days would claim his real name to be Dusty Rhodes but now says he’s planning on going by Frances, his middle name, to alleviate the confusion.

As this name debate illustrates, Dusty Rhodes and the River Band is, in a way, one of the first long-term specimens of the current DIY era in music. As Apodaca puts it, they started doing things the way they wanted to do them, playing whatever music felt right, and there was really no one there to tell them to stop, so they didn’t and they haven’t. They haven’t concerned themselves much with fitting into any given genre or meshing particularly well with any concert bill or festival lineup. But the funny thing is in being so flagrantly autonomous they have created a massively accessible brand of music with an almost confusingly broad appeal.

“Indie rock, in general, is so broad and you can do whatever you want. That’s what we’re going to do, and no one has really told us ‘no’ yet. The label hasn’t told us ‘no;’ they’ve let us do whatever we want. It’s almost 2010. It’s about time we just get on with making music,” says Apodaca, “who cares what it sounds like or what genre it’s supposed to be. If it’s cool, then it’s cool, and if you like making music like that then just do it. If you’re touring with no label or no booking agent, just do whatever you want, and that’s how we started this band. Again, man, it’s almost 2010. Get over the whole genre thing.”

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band are on tour now; dates available here.

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Tom Doctoroff: Winning Designs in China: Standing Out to Fit In

The Chinese consumer is becoming increasingly modern and internationalized. However, while “egos” and ambitions are huge, the “new generation” is not becoming “individualistic” in the…