drinks
In a quaint pub nestled in Canterbury, some 50 kilometres south-west of London, two young women eagerly await free drinks promised by a stranger on Facebook. Imagine this. Just post your request and if you're lucky, free drinks will follow. It's the kick-off of what might just be the most extraordinary drinking game in Britain right now. The young students write on Facebook: "Two broke students celebrating the end of a tough assignment period. Any drinks are welcome (except beer plz)." A photo accompanying the post shows two young women sitting in at a table in a Canterbury pub. Shortly afterw...
DPA International
In a quaint pub nestled in Canterbury, some 50 kilometres south-west of London, two young women eagerly await free drinks promised by a stranger on Facebook. Imagine this. Just post your request and if you're lucky, free drinks will follow. It's the kick-off of what might just be the most extraordinary drinking game in Britain right now. The young students write on Facebook: "Two broke students celebrating the end of a tough assignment period. Any drinks are welcome (except beer plz)." A photo accompanying the post shows two young women sitting in at a table in a Canterbury pub. Shortly afterw...
DPA
New York (AFP) - A US court mostly sided with tax authorities in a dispute with Coca-Cola over how the soda giant reports income from some overseas markets, according to a ruling this week.The US Tax Court decision Wednesday largely upheld the Internal Revenue Service's arguments, concluding that the agency "did not abuse (its) discretion" in the case. The dispute centers on how Coca-Cola estimates income between 2007 and 2009 tied to licensed foreign manufacturing affiliates in Brazil, Ireland and some other countries that have lower tax rates than the US.The IRS sent a notice to Coca-Cola in...
AFP
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