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Britain is not doomed to repeat woes of US newspaper industry ; MEDIA ANALYSIS
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THERE cannot be the least doubt that American newspapers are in
dire straits.
Across the United States, newspaper owners are laying off staff,
cutting back on editions, reducing publishing frequency, narrowing
their titles' distribution areas, outsourcing production and back-
office work and desperately exploring new ways of cutting costs in
order to stave off complete closure. Indeed, several papers have
already vanished from sale.
So bad is the situation that the concept of inn...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Howard M. Wachtel, Street of Dreams--Boulevard of Broken Hearts: Wall Street's First Century.(book review)(Book Review)
Business History
; HOWARD M. WACHTEL, Street of Dreams--Boulevard of Broken Hearts: Wall Street's First Century (London and Sterling, VA: Pluto Press, 2003. Pp.xv + 239; illus. H/back ISBN 0 7453 1925 4,19.99 [pound sterling). Wall Street was so christened by the British in 1685 but the thoroughfare had originated
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Wall Street Bankers, Reelection Backers; New York's Financial Titans Support Bush in a Big Way
The Washington Post
; One unseasonably cool evening in late October, a group of Wall Street bankers waited aboard a ferry in New York Harbor for the short trip to Ellis Island and a thank-you event for major backers of President Bush's reelection campaign. Ordinarily, the bankers -- unaccustomed to waiting for anything
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On Wall Street, The Choice Is the `Devil It Knows'
The Washington Post
; Wall Street's attitude toward presidential candidates George Bush and Michael S. Dukakis can be summed up in the words of the old proverb: "Better the devil you know than the devil you don't know." On Wall Street, they know and prefer Bush. Traders, investment strategists and money managers say the
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WALL STREET BONUSES SOAR TO $13 BILLION
The Columbian
; DUNSTAN PRIAL, Associated Press The Columbian 12-17-1999 Wall Street's wheelers and dealers will receive a record $13 billion in bonuses this year, but most won't be bragging about the new Rolex or their African safari. Brokers and traders are much more secretive than they were in the extravagant
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Wall Street falling on tough times
Winnipeg Free Press
; face=+Bold; Once-booming markets hit by uncertaintyface=-Bold; By Walter Hamilton NEW YORK -- Like a lot of New Yorkers, Peter Poulakakos is holding his breath. His legendary Wall Street restaurant, Harry's Cafe & Steak, relies heavily on the normally free-spending financial industry, and Wall
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