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First NFL game in 3-D fumbles, then recovers
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Alexy II dies
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Religion today
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Analysis Avoiding blame in auto industry crisis
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Ex-CHiPs star Estrada to patrol with Ind. police
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Dixie Chicks singer sued for defamation
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
No. 19 Arizona State defeats Jackson State 81-60
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Abrams leads No. 8 Texas over No. 12 UCLA, 68-64
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Texas Sen. Hutchison exploring run for governor
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Abrams leads No. 8 Texas over No. 12 UCLA, 68-64
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
US, China pledge to jointly tackle global crisis
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
SKorean firms confident NKorean zone wont close
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Donors pledge $5 bln soft loans, grants to Vietnam
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
UKs Brown to press banks to cut interest rates
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
World markets mostly down ahead of US jobs report
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Texas Sen. Hutchison exploring run for governor
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Thornton leads Sharks to 9th straight win
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
Hutchison takes step toward run for Texas governor
Southern Ledger - December 5, 2008
 
Home > News
Burma warned over cyclone delays
The UN urges Burma to reconsider its attitude towards allowing aid teams into the country to avoid further loss of life.
BBC News - May 9, 2008
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Forging a Chinese Scent
Western perfume makers have been selling their scents in China for roughly a decade. But in a few months, Parfums Benetton will introduce two of the first perfumes that have been designed especially for Chinese tastes.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Citi?s Chief Says Change Will Take Time and Patience
At Vikram Pandit?s first major presentation to investors and analysts, Citigroup said that it planned to sell about $400 billion in assets in the next two to three years.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Citing Fuel Costs, FedEx Cuts Its Outlook
Fedex said its fuel costs have risen by more than 7 percent since it issued its guidance in March. It added that weak economic conditions have resulted in lower demand.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Kerkorian Moves to Buy a Bigger Stake in Ford
The billionaire investor started a cash tender offer on Friday to bolster his stake in Ford to 5.6 percent, but stopped short of revealing his long-term plans as a major shareholder.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Bits: Can Facebook Build a Better Passport?
Facebook said that it will let users bring information from their profiles onto other sites. It is also reviving the possibility of a universal logon, an idea tried unsuccessfully years ago by Microsoft.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Circuit City Opens Its Books to Blockbuster
The electronics chain said that it would allow Blockbuster to examine its books, a shift from its initial, highly skeptical stance toward Blockbuster?s unsolicited takeover bid.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Growing Perfume Market in China Is Mostly About the Brand
The importance of brand in sales raises the question of the market?s future stability as sales of perfume, a product that has few cultural roots in China, have recently risen exponentially.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
The Saturday Profile: Starting a Party, and Hoping to Crash Singapore?s Parliament Again
J. B. Jeyaretnam, the grand old man of Singapore?s political opposition, is ready to joust with the political establishment after six years of political banishment.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
City Room: Can Bedbugs Live on the Subway?
Bedbugs can live in subway trains and stations, an urban entomologist says, as they did 100 years ago in taxis, trains and buses.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Hints of a Shift at OPEC on Increasing Oil Output
An oil official signaled for the first time in months that the oil cartel might increase its output if prices keep rising.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
City Room: Con Edison Proposes Another Rate Increase
The utility asked state regulators to approve a three-year plan that would would raise rates by 4.9 percent a year through March 2012, or a total of $1.67 billion over the three years.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Spam Moves to Cellphones and Gets More Invasive
If you thought spam on your computer was a bother, brace yourself for round two: spammers want to find you on your cellphone.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
The Lede: The Vatican Tries a Little Web II.0
Now you can view the Pope's home page in a language even more antique than Cobol.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Obama Pulls Ahead of Clinton in Superdelegates
The superdelegate count was one of the few areas where Hillary Rodham Clinton still maintained an advantage.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Illegal Immigrants Turn to Traditional Healing
Health care for many migrant workers is provided by a parallel system of spiritual healers and home remedies.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
E-Mails Show Derogatory Banter at Secret Service
Supervisors made sexual jokes and racially derogatory comments about blacks, according to internal messages.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
On Flooded Burmese Coast, the Smell of Rot and Death
Six days after a cyclone, it is clear the damage is great and that little aid has made it to villagers along the sea south of Yangon.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Burmese Junta Seizes Aid and Blocks Foreigners
The refusal to allow doctors and relief experts to enter in large numbers contributed to a concern that starvation and disease could kill as many people as the cyclone.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
News Analysis: Israel Readying for a Post-Olmert Era
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is a survivor, but he faces a bribery inquiry that is widely viewed as serious.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
Music Issue: Rockin' the Casbah
Thousands of music fans head to Morocco each summer for the Gnawa and World Music Festival, turning the seaside resort of Essaouira into a North African version of Woodstock.
New York Times - May 9, 2008
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SHOULD BILL FRIST RUN FOR GOVERNOR OF TENNESSEE IN 2010?
NO, HE DOESN'T HAVE THE MANAGEMENT EXPERIENCE WE NEED.
YES, HE IS THE BEST SHOT THE GOP HAS AT TAKING THE GOVERNOR'S OFFICE.
NO, HIS LEADERSHIP OF THE U.S. SENATE LED TO DEMOCRATIC PARTY CONTROL.
YES, UNLESS HE WANTS TO KEEP DOING SOMETHING UNIMPORTANT LIKE SAVING LIVES.
NO; BUT HE WILL RUN AND HE WILL WIN.
NOT SURE.
 
 

Previous Articles:

WHY AL-ZAWAHIRI WOULD BE A LOUSY TALK RADIO HOST.
November 21, 2008 - November 28, 2008

ARE TENNESSEE REPUBLICANS SET TO CLEAN HOUSE ON THE HILL?
November 11, 2008 - November 19, 2008

WILL AMERICA COME TOGETHER AFTER THE ELECTION?
October 30, 2008 - November 4, 2008

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