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...Buck Farmer ’08 said he too has noticed a drop in positions offered, but added that he believes the reason for this trend is that companies cannot currently afford to hire as many graduates as they could last year...

Author: By Adrienne C. Collatos, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Market Woes Upset Recruiting | 10/17/2007 | See Source »

...Lehman Brothers are only recruiting for one position, it would suggest that the other divisions are not doing well enough to take on other people,” Farmer said...

Author: By Adrienne C. Collatos, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Market Woes Upset Recruiting | 10/17/2007 | See Source »

Taking advantage of a debilitating political crisis in Beirut, overstretched security forces and a lifeless economy, the Bekaa farmers this year have cultivated the largest hashish harvest since the war-torn 1980s when this fertile valley was awash with drug crops. Lebanese police estimate that some 16,000 acres (6,500 hectares) of hashish and a small amount of opium poppies were planted this year on the sun-baked plain of the northern Bekaa. "Lebanese hashish is the best in the world, better than Turkey and Afghanistan," says Ali, a Bekaa farmer standing in his field of knee-high hashish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Comeback for Lebanon's Hashish | 10/16/2007 | See Source »

After Colonel Machmouchi and his men were shot at by heavily armed fighters, the annual hashish eradication program was abandoned for fear of provoking a popular uprising against the government. But the farmers say that this year's successful harvest is only the beginning. "We are tired of being hungry. We view the government as an enemy and from now on we are going to grow hashish and we don't care what the government says or tries to do," said Ahmad, a hashish farmer. It is an argument that fails to win the sympathy of Lebanon's drug police...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Comeback for Lebanon's Hashish | 10/16/2007 | See Source »

Indeed the culture still celebrates people like Jamal Hamieh, a down-to-earth but shrewd farmer from Taraya village. Protected by a private army drawn from the Hamieh clan, he hosted Mafia dons, Colombian drug lords and New York gangsters, and threw lavish parties for top Syrian military intelligence officers based in the Bekaa, plying them with whisky, women and thick wads of $100 bills. Hamieh received expensive presents in return from his grateful clients. One gift was a brand-new Porsche which Hamieh, unaware of the car's status value, blithely destroyed in a matter of days by driving...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Comeback for Lebanon's Hashish | 10/16/2007 | See Source »

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