Rep. Alan Grayson asks Inspector General Coleman of the Federal Reserve some very basic questions of about various Fed programs and activities and gets nowhere.
Poor Audio quality but I think you’ll get the point!
13
May
Rep. Alan Grayson asks Inspector General Coleman of the Federal Reserve some very basic questions of about various Fed programs and activities and gets nowhere.
Poor Audio quality but I think you’ll get the point!
22
Jan
(Reuters) - NetApp tops the list of the 100 best companies to work for, most of which are still hiring, Fortune magazine said on Thursday.
Following are the first 50 of the 100 companies on the 12th annual list compiled by Fortune and published on its Web site fortune.com/bestcompanies.
1. NetApp
2. Edward Jones
3. Boston Consulting Group
4. Google
5. Wegmans Food Markets
6. Cisco Food Systems
7. Genentech
8. Methodist Hospital System
9. Goldman Sachs & Co
10. Nugget Market
11. Adobe Systems
12. Recreational Equipment (REI)
13. Devon Energy
14. Robert W. Baird
15. W.L. Gore & Associates
16. Qualcomm
17. Principal Financial Group
18. Shared Technologies
19. OhioHealth
20. SAS
21. Arnold & Porter
22. Whole Foods Market
23. Zappos.com
24. Starbucks
25. Johnson Financial Group
26. Aflac 2
7. QuikTrip
28. PCL Construction Enterprises
29. Quicken Loans
30. Bingham McCutchen
31. CarMax
32. Container Store
33. JM Family Enterprises
34. Umpqua Bank
35. Kimley-Horn & Associates
36. Alston & Bird
37. TDIndustries
38. Microsoft
39. Paychex
40. EOG Resources
41. Camden Property Trust
42. Plante & Moran
43. Rackspace Hosting
44. NuStar Energy
45. King’s Daughters Medical Center
46. American Fidelity Assurance
47. DreamWorks Animation SKG
48. Mattel
49. Intuit
50. Burns & McDonnell
(Compiled by Ellen Wulfhorst) © Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved.
23
Dec
Emergency workers rescued drivers on a popular commuter route to Washington Monday after a water main break sent a 4-foot wall of water down the road.
At least 15 people in were rescued after the water main failed about 8 a.m. at River Road and Fenway Drive in Bethesda, Md., near the Congressional Country Club, an official said.
Helicopters from the Maryland State Police and U.S. Park Police used buckets to save a handful of drivers, while the county’s Swift Water and Technical Rescue teams used boats and ropes for others, said Pete Piringer, a spokesman for the Montgomery County Fire Department.
“Some motorists here — this is a fairly popular commuter route into Washington — they were confronted with a 4-, 5-foot wall of water,” Piringer told FOX News.
