Life ends every Sunday morning
Article Abstract:
When Ian Hugo's wife said she was leaving him for another man he did not know the procedures to be followed but was put in tough with Families Need Fathers (FNF) who steered him onto the right path. He eventually paid his wife off, costing 100,000 pounds sterling, and managed to keep the house that his children loved. They, a girl of 11 and a boy of nine, were very upset but Hugo has the children for about half time. The girl's school work suffered and the boy began to wet the bed and has become timid.
Publication Name: The Independent
Subject: Retail industry
ISSN: 0951-9467
Year: 1993
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Welcome back, Dad
Article Abstract:
Many people in their 40s and 50s were forced out of employment as companies focused on downsizing in the first half of the 1990s. However, this situation is now reversing as employers realise that shortages of younger workers will become a problem in the foreseeable future. It is becoming increasingly recognised that older workers are a valuable resource. Recruiting older workers can allow employers to respond to demographic changes and create a rich, diverse workforce.
Publication Name: The Independent
Subject: Retail industry
ISSN: 0951-9467
Year: 1997
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: The Countess of Oxford and Asquith. Welcome back to the radiotherapy room. Welcome to Oxford, Miss Clinton
- Abstracts: Patients before they are born. Born of blossom and snow. Born to be wild
- Abstracts: Learn to drive: all over again. Learn them to speak proper, like
- Abstracts: Sex, lies and a cover-up: the case against William Jefferson Clinton. Judging a book by its cover
- Abstracts: When the scientist plays the Devil. Woodpecker, spare that spire. Spare us the moral scientist