The biggest question floating among Wall Street analysts who follow Caterpillar Inc. this week has been whether the “up” cycle the company is now enjoying can be sustained.
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The biggest question floating among Wall Street analysts who follow Caterpillar Inc. this week has been whether the “up” cycle the company is now enjoying can be sustained.
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I was reading about the new film “United 93″ Friday as I boarded USAir Flight 633. Joe Morgenstern had a review of it in the Wall Street Journal and David Denby in the New Yorker. They both admired the film, which I have not seen yet. Morgenstern says, “Never has an audience brought to a motion picture what we bring to ‘United 93’ — a sense of dread caused by an open national wound.”
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Indiana - Tuesday is primary election day in Indiana. It’s a congressional election year, with all seats up for election. Recent NBC News, “Wall Street Journal” poll shows 67% of those questioned say the country is headed in the wrong direction, while 65% disapprove of the job Congress is doing.
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Bank of America Corp. is in negotiations to exchange its BankBoston operations in South America for a stake in a Brazilian bank, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday, citing people familiar with the situation.The deal with Banco Itaú Holding Financeira SA could be finalized in a week, the newspaper reported. In recent years, Charlotte-based Bank of America has taken minority stakes in banks in
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The latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll has President Bush’s job approval sinking to a new low of 36%. Coupled with a 3-point drop in Rasmussen’s daily tracking poll (which is a big one-day move for the Rasmussen poll) Bush’s job approval in the RealClearPolitics Poll Average dropped below 35% for the first time ever, at 34.8%.
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Today’s Wall Street Journal discusses the fight over Whois privacy. The article on the front page of the Marketplace section starts by discussing how the American Red Cross and eBay use the Whois database to track down scammers: “Last fall, in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the American Red Cross used an Internet database called “Whois” that lists names and numbers of Web-site owners to shut down
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NEW YORK—-April 27, 2006–The Wall Street Journal today announced the recipients of the inaugural Robert L. Bartley Fellowships. The fellowship program consists of paid internships of up to six months and provides students and early-career journalists the opportunity to work as writers and editors on the Journal’s editorial page in the U.S., Europe or Asia, as well as at the Far Eastern
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