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DC Studios Co-CEO James Gunn Says Rumors That Superman Needs to Make $700M at the Box Office to Be Successful Are 'Just Complete and Utter Nonsense' IGNSuperman review - is it a bust? Is it a pain? James Gunn's dim reboot is both The GuardianSuperman First Reviews: A Fun Comic Book Movie with Old-School Charm That Promises a Bright Future for the New DCU Rotten Tomatoes‘Superman': The original superhero is back, with a brisk new attitude The Washington Post
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The Trump administration had asked the justices to block a lower court's ruling that paused the largest phase of the president's efforts to downsize the government.
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Trump and Bondi, Confronted Over Epstein Files, Tell Supporters to Move On The New York TimesBondi explains missing minute in Epstein video The HillUS Justice Department scrambles to defend its about-face on release of Epstein files ReutersMusk, MAGA torch Trump administration over Epstein investigation Politico
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President Trump on Tuesday vowed to not back down on his new Aug. 1 deadline on tariffs — but Wall Street isn't convinced.
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UK knowledge economy investor Growth Capital Partners has hit a one-and-done final close for its sixth flagship fund, reaching its hard cap at £411m.
The post Growth Capital Partners races to £411m hard cap Fund VI close in just three months appeared first on AltAssets Private Equity News.
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MANY developed countries have anti-immigration political parties, which terrify the incumbents and sometimes break into government. Lithuania is unusual in having an anti-emigration party. The small Baltic country, with a population of 2.8m (and falling), voted heavily in 2016 for the Lithuanian Farmer and Greens' Union, which pledged to do something to stem the outward tide. As with some promises made elsewhere to cut immigration, not much has happened as a result.
"Lithuanians are gypsies, like the Dutch," says Andrius Francas of the Alliance for Recruitment, a jobs agency in Vilnius, the capital. Workers began to drift away almost as soon as Lithuania declared independence from the Soviet Union in 1990. The exodus picked up in the new century, when Lithuanians became eligible to work normally in the EU. For many, Britain is the promised land. In the Pegasas bookshop just north of the Neris river in Vilnius, four shelves are devoted to English-language tuition. No other language—not even...Continue reading
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