Lunch lady slammed for food that is ‘too good’

"A talented head cook at a school in central Sweden has been told to stop baking fresh bread and to cut back on her wide-ranging veggie buffets because it was unfair that students at other schools didn't have access to the unusually tasty offerings. 'A menu has been developed... It is about making a collective effort on quality, to improve school meals overall and to try and ensure everyone does the same,' Katarina Lindberg, head of the unit responsible for the school diet scheme, told the local Falukuriren newspaper. The school's vegetable buffet will be halved in size and Eriksson's handmade loafs will be replaced with store-bought bread." Continue reading

Continue ReadingLunch lady slammed for food that is ‘too good’

The Debt Transfer Game; Slovakia Needs EUR 264M for ESM

"Slovakia has less than 10 days left to find the EUR 264 million as the first two payments to the the European Stability Mechanism, the EU bailout system. Ironic as it is, Slovakia will have to put itself in debt in order to cover its commitment to the EUR 700 billion ESM, which has been set up to deal with debts of countries in trouble, but can now also be used to bail out banks. The government plans to issue government bonds to raise the required finances at a time when it is also trying to reduce the public finance deficit by introducing a whole series of new taxes and levies." Continue reading

Continue ReadingThe Debt Transfer Game; Slovakia Needs EUR 264M for ESM

Europe Puts Squeeze on Iran Regime

"The European Union reached a preliminary deal Friday on a broad package of new sanctions on Iran in a fresh push to force Tehran to the negotiating table over its nuclear activities, EU diplomats said. They are set to be signed off Monday when foreign ministers meet in Luxembourg. The new round of sanctions is among the toughest yet adopted against Iran and comes as diplomatic efforts to negotiate a solution to Iran's nuclear program have stalled. The stepped-up European sanctions pressure comes as the U.S. Congress looks to further tighten the economic pressure on Iran." Continue reading

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European Union wins Nobel Peace Prize

"While welcomed by European leaders, the award will have little practical effect on the debt crisis afflicting the single currency zone, which has brought economic instability and social unrest to several states, with rioting in Athens and Madrid. On the streets of the Greek capital, where demonstrators have burned Nazi flags to protest against German demands for austerity, the award was greeted with disbelief. The prize, worth $1.2 million, will be presented in Oslo on December 10. It was not immediately clear who from the EU would be there to collect the check and what it would be spent on." Continue reading

Continue ReadingEuropean Union wins Nobel Peace Prize