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InternetNews January 25, 2005 Roy Mark |
Speculation Over Powell Replacement Begins Current FCC Commissioner Kevin Martin is among a number of folks being bandied about to fill the top spot. Whoever the president appoints, analysts predict there will be no major policy changes at the FCC.  |
BusinessWeek January 31, 2005 Michael Arndt |
Needed: More Bite To Fight Fat Without stronger federal guidelines, foodmakers will keep pushing junk.  |
BusinessWeek January 31, 2005 John Carey |
Taking Quick Aim Against Snipers The Pentagon needed a way to counter attacks in Iraq. It got results in short order, illustrating how the demands of war are a powerful spur to progress.  |
BusinessWeek January 31, 2005 Michelle Conlin |
Far From The Madding Crowd With housing prices on both coasts at nosebleed levels, more and more professional-class migrants are cashing out of their homes in New York, the Bay Area, and Los Angeles. They are moving to value-priced regions of the country, creating tiny pockets of blue America in the heart of the red states.  |
BusinessWeek January 31, 2005 Howard Gleckman |
The Real Retirement Time Bomb Without reform, Medicare premiums will eat away at Social Security benefits.  |
Sports Central January 24, 2005 Eric Poole |
Whither Goes the Vanquished The biggest winner Sunday in the NFL's conference championship games just might have been Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell.  |
Geotimes January 2005 Fred Schwab |
Mount Everest, Nevada The United States entered the nuclear age more than a half-century ago, but has not yet resolved what to do with nuclear waste.  |
Entrepreneur February 2005 Joshua Kurlantzick |
United Nation Post-election, can the parties reach out to entrepreneurs on the issues that matter most?  |
BusinessWeek January 31, 2005 |
How Nations Can Age Gracefully Demography is not destiny. As the debate over aging gets under way around the world, it would be wise to keep that in mind.  |
AFP eWire January 21, 2005 |
U.S. Philanthropy Ranks Seventh in Study of International Nonprofit Sectors The United States ranks only seventh in the world in its level of private philanthropy as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP), according to a new study from Johns Hopkins University.  |
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