Advertise with Us
Cheney says no one saw financial crisis coming
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Will Smith voted 2008s top moneymaking movie star
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Review Just say I dont to Bride Wars
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Meltdown 101 The importance of same-store sales
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Broadcasts to mobile devices to start in 22 cities
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
New TV trends Internet movies, 3-D, power saving
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
UN curbs Gaza aid after trucks hit by Israeli fire
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
UN 257 Palestinian children killed in Gaza
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Arabs, West agree on elements of Gaza resolution
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
$5M bond for man charged with murder of Ohio mom
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Firefighters near containment of Colo. wildfire
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Fatal police shooting sparks violent protests
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
2 arrested in burglary at Gregg Allmans Ga. home
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Travoltas hold private memorial for son in Florida
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Gavin Creel set to play Claude in Bways Hair
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Tom Cruise calls Travolta death horrific
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Panel recommends impeaching Ill. governor
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
Nadal loses, Federer advances at Qatar Open
Southern Ledger - January 8, 2009
 
Home > News
U.S. Open: Djokovic and Federer Roll Into the Men?s Final
Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer will face off for the Open title on Sunday, pitting the up-and-comer against the man trying to win his fourth Open in a row.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
READ THE FULL STORY

Thousands Celebrate Pavarotti?s Art and Humanity
Luciano Pavarotti, the Italian tenor, was eulogized on Saturday as a ?great artist? with ?a profound sense of humanity.?
New York Times - September 8, 2007
A Streetwise Veteran Schooled Young Obama
Class emerged as a subtext during Barack Obama?s failed attempt to unseat an incumbent congressman on the South Side of Chicago.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Boys Cast Out by Polygamists Find Help
Over the last six years, hundreds of teenage boys have been forced out of a polygamous settlement on the Arizona-Utah border.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Shadowy Money Trail of a Fugitive Fund-Raiser
At the center of the Norman Hsu mystery is the question of how he evolved from a bankrupt swindler to a wealthy political donor.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Bomb Kills 15 in Shiite Area of Baghdad
The bombing was the first against Shiites in Baghdad since last week, when the cleric Moktada al-Sadr ordered his militia to halt all attacks.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Troop Buildup, Yielding Slight Gains, Fails to Meet U.S. Goals
The U.S. troop ?surge? has slowed, but far from stopped, Iraq?s civil war, repeated visits to Baghdad neighborhoods show.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Libyan Leader Says He Will Bring Rebels to Meeting on Darfur
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon met with Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi and said the Libyan leader had pledged to use his influence on behalf of a peace conference next month.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Employment Report Scares the Market
A surprisingly weak jobs report sent the markets reeling and plunged the major stock averages into a deficit for the week.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Correction: A Tool to Organize Our Many Organizers
The Prototypes column last Sunday, about Scrybe, a personal information management software program, misspelled the surname of a Scrybe user who said he had adopted it because of its interface and because its calendar did a better job of pulling together data than others. He is David Gerbino, not Ge...
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Everybody's Business: It?s Time to Take a Deep Breath
The subprime mortgage industry was far from an unmixed good, but it helped some people realize the American dream.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Economic View: It?s Monetary Policy, Not a Morality Play
Markets rarely fit into simple moral narratives, and while stories of heroes and villains may comfort us, they are not a good guide to understanding financial policy.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Fresh Starts: Ready for Anything (That?s Their Job)
Emergency management has emerged as a formal career path.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
The Boss: Arriving, Goal by Goal
?If you are going to lead, lead. If you are going to follow, follow. If you are not going to do either, get out of the way.?
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Preoccupations: The Not-So-Simple Art of the Blood Test
Only a few states require licensing for phlebotomists ? it?s mainly on-the-job training.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
National Perspectives: A Pricing System With Wiggle Room
Variable pricing, in which a house might be put on the market for $510,000 to $565,000, has gained popularity over the last decade.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Some Labor Pains for First Data Deal
All last week, Wall Street was watching negotiations between Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and a group of big banks to finance the First Data Corporation buyout.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
The Count: Making Sense of Who Buys Tech, and When
Two main factors, attitude and income, help determine whether someone will buy the latest technology or hold back.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Putting Stock in His Market
Entertaining is what Dylan Ratigan, the fast-talking young host on CNBC, likes to do most.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Square Feet | Spotlight: Midtown?s Biggest Fans May Be Foreign Buyers
Buoyed by the strong economies and currencies in their own countries, foreign investors now see an opportunity to scoop up coveted Manhattan real estate.
New York Times - September 8, 2007
The Nation: Bernanke, the Fed and 2008
If the Federal Reserve is unable prevent housing sickness from infecting the rest of the economy, will the Democratic and Republican parties make it to the 2008 elections without catching something?
New York Times - September 8, 2007
Keep up with Steve, join our G-Mail List to receive Gill Show updates and Steve's weekly column...
Name:
E-mail:
 
WILL LIFTING THE BAN ON GAYS SERVING OPENLY IN THE MILITARY HELP OUR SECURITY?
NO, IT WILL JUST ADD TO THE DECLINE OF OUR MORAL FOUNDATIONS.
YES, THERE WILL BE MORE PEOPLE WHO CAN SERVE IN THE MILITARY.
IT WILL HAVE NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT ON THE MILITARY, BUT IT GIVES A GOVERNMENT STAMP OF APPROVAL TO HOMOSEXUALITY.
NOT SURE.
 
 

Previous Articles:

OBAMA FLUNKS HIS FIRST CONSTITUTIONAL TEST BY APPOINTING HILLARY AS SECRETARY OF STATE.
December 1, 2008 - December 8, 2008

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

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