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BusinessWeek April 11, 2005 Catherine Yang |
Another Case Entirely Former AOL chairman Stephen M. Case's latest gig: A daring bet on hospitality and health care.  |
BusinessWeek April 11, 2005 Tom Lowry |
The CFO Behind Adelphia's Rescue Vanessa Wittman is cleaning up a financial mess at Adelphia Communications and prepping for a sale  |
BusinessWeek April 11, 2005 David Welch |
Will The UAW Cut GM Some Slack? The union faces a tough call on whether to help the carmaker cut back on health-care costs  |
BusinessWeek April 11, 2005 Christopher Palmeri |
"The Revenge Of Steve Wynn" Kirk Kerkorian took Mirage Resorts away from Steve Wynn. Now Wynn is striking back with the new Wynn Resorts Ltd. casino in Las Vegas.  |
BusinessWeek April 11, 2005 Emily Thornton |
Purcell: Only Making It Worse Morgan Stanley CEO Philip J. Purcell's moves may be about self-protection, not performance.  |
BusinessWeek April 11, 2005 Adam Aston |
A First-Class Crisis In The Making? As mail and commerce move to the Net, the U.S. Postal Service is facing a slump.  |
BusinessWeek April 11, 2005 Robert Barker |
What's Looming Over Boise Cascade The big forest-products company's SEC filing spells out the company's many ties to OfficeMax -- a tangled relationship that should give investors pause before bidding on this IPO.  |
BusinessWeek April 11, 2005 |
Hank Greenberg And History The AIG scandal won't dim his legacy in furthering global trade. Even executives brought down by scandal are entitled to be judged as much for what they built as for how they ended their reign.  |
BusinessWeek April 11, 2005 Ian Rowley |
Japan: Climbing On The M&A Train Lehman is taking its lumps over a deal for a Japanese radio broadcaster -- but at least it's a deal. Foreign finance firms in Japan are not much loved.  |
BusinessWeek April 11, 2005 Joseph Weber |
Tough Questions For AIG's Auditors Regulators are probing if PricewaterhouseCoopers let the financial shenanigans slip through. Already, institutional shareholders, who sued AIG last fall when its stock began a 21% plunge, are considering roping the auditing firm into a class action.  |
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