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Monday, September 17th, 2007

Money Morning Seeks Associate Business Editor For Fast-Growing News Service



By William Patalon III
Managing Editor

If you have business writing experience and a superb knowledge of investing and the capital markets - and want to spread your creative wings and bid adios to your stodgy newsroom or brokerage house - then we’d like to talk to you.

Money Morning, the industry’s fastest-growing global-investing news service, is looking for a full-time associate business editor. Money Morning zeroes in internationally oriented news and investing opportunities by following global money flows, and our unofficial motto is: ‘Go Global or Get Left Behind.’ Writing about this major paradigm shift in investing is our bread and butter. We break news. And we’re already being recognized as a leading news organization: Major news sources are syndicating our stories and our writers are being interviewed by leading media outlets such as ‘Air America Radio.’

Money Morning offers a competitive salary, plus significant benefits. And the company’s offices are situated in the beautiful Mt. Vernon historic district of downtown Baltimore. The ideal candidate will have a minimum three-plus years experience writing and editing business and investing stories. Finance MBA’s are welcome to apply. Marketing knowledge is an extreme plus. Interested candidates should send a cover letter, resume and no more than six clips to the attention of Violet Campbell, The Oxford Club, 105 West Monument St., Baltimore, Maryland, 21201, or to vcampbell@oxfordclub.com NOTE: Applications without cover letters will not be accepted.


Jim Rogers: China’s Expansion Depends on Water

Oil isn’t China’s most precious resource. China must spend $162 billion in the next five years to clean up its polluted rivers-as nearly 40% of them are undrinkable. "China has a huge water problem," Legendary investor Jim Rogers says. "…If they don’t solve it, or if they don’t solve it in time, then China has failed." Find out which six global water treatment powerhouses are set to make “liquid profits.”