A collection of interesting articles from sunday newspapers across the USA...updated weekly
www.TheSundayNewspaper.com            
Sunday August 20, 2006
Front Page Sports Business Travel Life  
                     
                     
                     
Wall Street’s Women Face a Fork in the Road (NY Times)   Chinese knockoffs are Nike's headache (The Oregonian)
Netflix, Inc.
Many executives say that Wall Street must change fundamentally if it wants to hire and keep more women.   Product piracy - The sports-apparel giant gets government help fighting counterfeiters overseas, but it's an uphill race
 
 
 
                     
Legality of Online Poker Is on the Table (LA Times)   Kids & money (St Louis Post-Dispatch)            
  Wal-Mart.com USA, LLC FragranceNet.com
Tensions arise at the World Series as a bill to ban Internet gambling advances in Congress.   The lessons should start early, experts say.
 
                     
 
 
             
                                 
'Mom-preneurs' turn insider knowledge into a big business (Seattle Post-Intelligencer)   Chinese tighten Internet controls (Washington Times)
 
These entrepreneur moms focus entirely on their own demographic, selling products designed for babies, children and hip moms.   China is trying to tighten control over foreign investors in Internet ventures in a crackdown that a state newspaper said yesterday could see some companies stripped of operating licenses.
 
 
                                 
A thirst for the road (Denver Post)   Options scandal grew out of 1990s strategy (San Francisco Chronicle)
Will $3 gasoline - or even higher - be enough to dampen Americans' love affair with their cars? Don't bet your hybrid on it. Gas prices keep going up, and we keep buying.   Many Silicon Valley businesses offered the incentives to attract and retain their top employees in a competitive market
 
                                 
   
   
   
                                 
Higher education means higher costs
(Fresno Bee)
    Gas Wasn't Always King (Washington Post)
   
If you think your child's back-to-school notebooks and crayons are expensive, try shopping for a college student.     Since the 1920s, we've been fretting about the supply of gasoline and which fuel, if any, can provide a cheaper and more plentiful alternative.
   
                                 
Shouldering the load (Orange County Register)   Match.com   Builders cater to boomers (St Petersburg Times)
   
Homebuyers have many choices when it comes to picking a mortgage, but ignorance can hurt you..
    Florida no longer corners the market on developments for "active adults."
   
             
                         
You've got the power (Orlando Sentinel)  
  Yikes! That textbook costs what?(Charlotte Observer)
   
Reach for the rewards of online banking     Students hunting bargains find many alternatives to traditional bookstores
   
   
   
                       
                                 
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