What world record has the yangtze river number two broken?
A black Tibetan Mastiff, 80cm (31in) high and answering to the name of Yangtze River Number Two, is believed to have broken the world record as the most expensive dog after a Chinese woman paid 4 million yuan (£352,000) for the “priceless” canine. In keeping with its record-shattering status, according to local reports the 18-month-old dog arrived at its new owner’s home in stupendously excessive style. A motorcade of 30 luxury cars cruised to the airport in Xi’an to take delivery of Yangtze. Enchanted onlookers gathered to fête the arrival of the city’s new resident. If the figure of 4 million yuan is accurate, it makes Yangtze River Number Two possibly the most expensive pet dog in history. Earlier this year, a family in Florida paid $155,000 (£93,000) for a Labrador called Lancelot Encore. That price included the cost of cloning the original Lancelot. The young millionaire, according to one report on a Chinese website, fell in love with the dog while on a breeding trip to Qinghai pr
The Yangtze River Delta (YRD): New Economic Situation and Opportunities for Swiss Investment Despite of government target to slow down the economy, the economic growth rate of the Shanghai led YRD recorded the fastest growth in the past three years, expanding over 13% for the first three quarters of 2007. The growth was mainly fuelled by strong exports and the picking-up of consumer spending. The YRD region remains an economic powerhouse and solid foreign investment destination. Regional integration has been brought to strategic level of the YRD development, which will lead to integrated transportation infrastructure, unified market access regulations and administrative services. New policies are expected to be released soon. The development pattern of Shanghai is changing towards service-orientation, resulting in tertiary industry accounting for over half of the city’s GDP. Imports from Switzerland to the YRD region have significantly grown by 35.74% for the first half of 2007, while
A black Tibetan Mastiff, 80cm (31in) high and answering to the name of Yangtze River Number Two, is believed to have broken the world record as the most … Sources: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&ct2=us%2F0_0_s_0_0_t&usg=AFQjCNFPW103hG-5ROmWxjimwfri-PnzUA&cid=1310242996&ei=gympSojTG5Dq8gTN2J2IAg&rt=SEARCH&vm=STANDARD&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.timesonline.co.uk%2Ftol%2Fnews%2Fworld%2Fasia%2Farticle6828862.