LISTEN LIVE
Advertise with Us
Madonna, Ritchie to begin divorce in London Friday
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Invasive mussel confirmed in Utahs Electric Lake
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Microsoft lets Zune music subscribers keep tunes
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Ben Affleck tours refugee camps in eastern Congo
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Palestinian leader appeals to Israelis in peace ad
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Children dying in Haiti, victims of food crisis
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Ethnic Turk wins political prominence in Germany
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Salvador archbishop nixes probe of killed Jesuits
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Warsaw marks borders of former ghetto
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Oden helps Blazers rout Bulls
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
The 10 movies you shouldnt watch online
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Judge grants Franken ballot access request
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Daly shoots 68 in Hong Kong Open
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Sorenstam has some work to do at ADT Championship
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Iverson, Billups continue to star for new teams
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Stocks tumble for second day Treasurys surge
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
On Capitol Hill, campaign rivals take orientation
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
Minnesota recount under way in US Senate showdown
Southern Ledger - November 20, 2008
 
Home > News
No U-turn on capital gains reform
The government will not back down on controversial changes to capital gains tax when it unveils its plans.
BBC News - January 23, 2008
READ THE FULL STORY

The Great Deal Spread of 2008
Is it the greatest arbitrage opportunity of the century? There currently appear to be more than 20 pending transactions with deal spreads greater than 10 percent. The spreads are a result of a variety of factors that sometimes seem to bear no relation to the actual terms of the merger agreement and...
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Streaming Music That Users Choose
Last.FM, the free online radio service owned by CBS, will let users listen to any of 3.5 million songs on demand, paid for with advertising. The key limit: each user can only listen to each song 3 times.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
No Menus, in Five Languages
The forces against menus gear up with a new pentalingual warning sign and new enforceable legislation that could fine businesses up to $1,000 for leaving unwanted advertisements.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Resistant Bacteria Meet Reality Television
A popular Project Runway contestant contracts a potentially-deadly infection.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Bush Pushes Justice Dept. Nominee
President Bush pushed Steven G. Bradbury, author of legal opinions that endorsed rough techniques for suspects in C.I.A. custody, to be an assistant attorney general.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
2 Ways to Not Find Osama bin Laden
American officials still want to nab the terrorist leader, but Pakistan's leader sounds sick and tired of the whole subject.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Big Dig Suit Settled for $400 Million
Contractors who worked on the Boston highway project have agreed to settle a lawsuit filed by the state over a fatal tunnel ceiling collapse and to cover the costs of leaks and design flaws.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Beijing to Halve Traffic for Olympic Games
Beijing is planning to reduce motor traffic during the games to improve air quality and ease traffic flow.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
3 Skeletons in Washington Sq. Park
From 1797 to 1826, the area now known as Washington Square Park was used as a potter's field, or common burial ground. Several dozen bones were discovered there this week.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
New Details on Ledger?s Death
The masseuse who discovered Heath Ledger?s body called Mary-Kate Olsen before calling 911, police said.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Entrepreneur Unveils New Tourist Spacecraft
The creator of the first privately-financed craft to carry a human into space showed models of a new, bigger version.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
House Leaders Move Closer to Deal With Bush on Stimulus
Congressional leaders and the Bush administration appeared close to reaching a deal on a $145 billion economic stimulus package.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Freeport-McMoRan Profit Falls on One-Time Charges
The copper miner said its fourth-quarter earnings fell 3 percent from a slew of one-time charges and higher costs, despite surging revenue.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
The Macintosh Is Hot Again
Macintosh sales rise and two new software programs fill big holes in the computer?s landscape.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
$30 Million Settlement in Tainted-Toy Case
The agreement with the maker of Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway toys settles a class-action lawsuit by thousands of families who purchased lead-tainted products.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Qualcomm Reports Jump in First-Quarter Profit
The chipmaker posted an 18 percent increase in fiscal first-quarter profit on strong demand for cell phones that surf the Internet and download music and video.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
EBay Names Successor to Whitman
EBay said John Donahoe will replace Meg Whitman as C.E.O. The company, which reported a jump in fourth-quarter profit, muted its projected first-quarter revenue and sales for 2008.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Wal-Mart Chief Offers a Social Manifesto
As part of a campaign to upgrade its image by changing the way it does business, Wal-Mart has pledged to cut the energy used by many of its products by 25 percent.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Stocks Surge, Erasing Big Losses, at End of Volatile Day
Stocks plunged at the opening bell, spent much of the session in negative territory, then erased a 326-point deficit in the afternoon to post strong gains in the final hour.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
House Democrats Agree on Stimulus
Talks with the White House over a $145 billion economic package would bypass the normal committee process.
New York Times - January 23, 2008
Keep up with Steve, join our G-Mail List to receive Gill Show updates and Steve's weekly column...
Name:
E-mail:
 
SHOULD AMERICAN TAXPAYERS PAY THE TAB TO BAILOUT THE BIG THREE AUTOMAKERS?
NO WAY, NO HOW!!!
YES, THE INDUSTRY IS MUCH TOO IMPORTANT FOR US TO LET IT FAIL.
IT DEPENDS ON THE TERMS OF THE DEAL. WHAT INTEREST RATE WILL THEY PAY FOR THE CASH? WHAT DO WE GET AS COLLATERAL?
LET'S BAILOUT TWO OF THE THREE AND LET ONE FAIL. THEY SHOULD COMPETE TO BE IN THE TOP TWO BY CUTTING COSTS AND WAGES!
YES, BECAUSE WE CAN SAVE THEM JUST LIKE WE SAVED THE BANKS, INSURANCE COMPANIES, ETC.
NOT SURE.
 
 

Previous Articles:

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

WHY VOTERS ARE FURIOUS ABOUT THE BAILOUT PACKAGE.
October 5, 2008 - October 11, 2008

BOGUS POLL INTENDED TO BOOST OBAMA.
September 27, 2008 - October 4, 2008

READ THE ARCHIVES

Home | Biography | Photos | Speaking Requests | The Show | Bookshelf | Contact Us | Advertise | Meal Ticket | Steve Recommends | Steve Health Tips
Copyright (c) Gill Reports 2004. All rights reserved.
Created by: Archi Web