Marketplace Morning Report

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  2002

  (August)

   
one
• MTV becomes legal
• Faking it: marketing ploy for cellphones
• Baseball: bottom of 9th and no labor agreement in sight
• Where's the Medicaid money going?
• Slap on the handcuffs! WorldCom arrests
finally, legal...
two
• Airline bookings down for 9/11/02
• Junk bonds in a slump
• Chocolate taster: Is this a dream job?
• Spam filters filter out more than just spam
• American invasion? UK radio and TV ownership
still waiting...
five
• Wall Street scandals fuel executive shuffling
• Is there a South American economic flu?
• Microsoft moves ahead with settlement
• Sloan: We don't care why companies are cleaning up their acts
• Free health check for WTC workers
a lot of exec SHUFFLING going on...
six
• Now, you can take a bite out of corporate crime!
• Fast-tracking trade promotion authority
You've got new...AOL chief
• Free advice for CEOs tempted to stray
• Ehrenreich's "Nickel and Dimed: The Play" to debut
take a bite!
seven
• End of the rope for days of easy credit?
• Corporate malfeasance highlights: Enron/Tyco/Rigas family
• S. Africa: free AIDs drugs for some workers
• Japan: no more "descent from heaven" packages?
• Maxa: 9/11 and fear of flying
end of the rope...
eight
• IMF OKs $30 billion aid for Brazil
• TVs: digital by 2004
• Sicily's fastest-growing crime: water theft
• Botox: Not just for wrinkles anymore
• Medical insurance costs rising fast for your Fifis and Fluffys
aid to Brazil...
nine
• WorldCom: Oops! Accounting off by $7.1 billion
• Consumer electronics retailers struggling
• EU to end trade in "blood diamonds"
• Pressure to produce takes toll on workplace safety
• The Mouse House (Disney) is trapped
oops, we did it again...
twelve
• US Airways bankruptcy drags airline stocks down
• UK wants exemptions from U.S. corporate fraud law
• EU tax plan would sock Germans in beer gut
• SLC Winter Olympics 6 months on
• U.S. businesses in the Koreas
dragging stocks down
thirteen
• Will CEO Hancocks really matter
• UK politicians in trouble over corporate board memberships
• Merrill Lynch sanctioned in South Korea
Economist: Enron beginning of end for energy trading
• Courtroom sketch artists
 
fourteen
• It's John Hancock Day at the SEC!
• New report: FERC may be changing its tune
• More glitter rubs off Planet Hollywood
• Tourists flock to Rio's "famous" slums
• Face of retirement in U.S. is changing
sign here...
fifteen
• More legal woes: Waksal v. Waksal
• Hey! Let's play Name That Company!
• Are tax cuts actually an option right now?
• Will your job exclude you from benefits?
• Goodman: Refinancing your car loan
more legal woes
sixteen
• Investment banks taking a beating
• Europe floods: counting the costs
• Credit Suisse First Boston execs under fire
• Boeing contract talks: bring in the mediator
• "The King:" another posthumous comeback
taking a beating again...
nineteen
• Survey: doctors profits are shrinking
• Yes, a few surprises on the SEC blacklist...
• Could airline bankruptcies affect your travel?
• Andersen art on sale
• Shapiro: not the end of the story for CEO promises
profits are shrinking
twenty
• How accurate are background checks?
• Making arguments for partial privatization of Social Security
• "Best Fictional Earning Release Contest"
• Fallout of driver's license policy tightening
• Maxa: old-fashioned road trips
how accurate are they?
twenty-one
• Former Enron exec pleads guilty-- provides smoking gun?
• How vulnerable are we to cyber-attacks?
• Saudi investors pulling money out of the U.S.
• Gen-X'ers: not really slackers?
• Rockin' out at China's Woodstock
hey, look! smoking gun...
twenty-two
• Justice Dept. moves to seize Enron assets
• Is tax cut debate heating up again?
• Barristas slinging beans over "ice blended"
• Are baseball's problems rooted in free agency?
• Goodman on Equity Indexed Annuities
seizing assets
twenty-three
• Enron investigation moving too slowly?
• NY: brokers need FBI background checks
• You get the memo? The downturn ended
• Celebs united with union farmers in Calif.
• Changes in the fall season TV lineup
very SLOW pace
twenty-six
• Suing fast-food giants over national obesity
• Let's call it: The Great Equity Fund Exodus
• Top 10 Investment Scams: just for suckers?
T-minus-5 in baseball labor negotiations
• Kicking off Earth Summit in South Africa
warning! hazardous burgers!
twenty-seven
• New game show for jobless in Argentina
• Andersen: $60 million Enron mess settlement
• Brazil: banks keep credit lines open
• Fighting spam with haiku (5-7-5...)
• MBAs: not all they're cracked up to be?
OK, who wants one?
twenty-eight
• Do accounting irregularities pay off?
• Less time to file = too rushed to cook the books?
• Most countries flunk "corruption test"
• UK: fertility clinics pressuring women
• MBA: not what you bargained for?
they DO pay...
twenty-nine
• US Airways mechanics: thumbs down to wage cuts
• More severance for former Enron-ers
• WorldCom: legal noose is tightening
• China: crackdown on money laundering by corrupt officials
• Full speed ahead for cyber shopping carts
thumbs WAY down...
thirty
• Bottom of the 9th: baseball saves itself?
• WTO OKs $4 billion in sanctions against U.S.
• Are there any happy airline employees?
• Arthur Andersen: The Corporate Obituary...
• Throwing your boss in the shark tank
it saved itself...

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