Fast Money – A Squandered Talent Claimed by the Street – New York Times

A Squandered Talent Claimed by the Street – New York Times
Michael Chatfield was largely unknown outside of his neighborhood. He did not play high school basketball, and his college career consisted of one unremarkable season at a junior college in Oklahoma. In the Queensbridge housing project in Queens

Text Size – Chicago Tribune
charging students thousands of dollars for the companies’ help in landing internships. Here are some of the prices the companies charge, and what the students get for their money. For $799: An unpaid summer internship through Fast Track

Hungry to help – Register-Guard
SPRINGFIELD — An all-too-familiar scene to motorists in the metro area — a person, down on his or her luck, standing at a busy intersection or freeway off-ramp, clutching a cardboard sign soliciting donations — got a new twist Saturday. More

Not So Fast: Broadband Service Rip-Offs – Hartford Courant
Mike Mlikotin of Venice , Calif., wanted to know what he was really being offered after Verizon Communications Inc. included a pitch for its broadband service in his most recent phone bill. It said that Mlikotin, 75, could lock in a lifetime rate of

Spotlight: Beware the tax refund loan – Atlanta Journal Constitution
And yet, 8.4 million low- and moderate-income taxpayers squandered a collective $806 million in 2008 for immediate access to their refunds, according to a new report from two national consumer advocacy groups. Consumers shortchanged themselves by

Fast Money‘ Recap: Market Melt-up – Street.Com
Gary Kaminsky said on CNBC ’s “Fast Money” TV show on that he believes the market is entering a “melt-up” phase similar to the one in November and December. He said that is going to leave portfolio managers going to sleep at nights with only one

Alleged scammer charged with theft – Everett Herald
LYNNWOOD — Prosecutors on Friday accused a Seattle woman of scamming another woman out of $60,000 under the ruse of trying to donate money to a charity. Investigators believe the Snohomish County woman is just one of several people targeted by

A Squandered Talent Claimed by the Street – New York Times
Michael Chatfield was largely unknown outside of his neighborhood. He did not play high school basketball, and his college career consisted of one unremarkable season at a junior college in Oklahoma. In the Queensbridge housing project in Queens

Text Size – Chicago Tribune
charging students thousands of dollars for the companies’ help in landing internships. Here are some of the prices the companies charge, and what the students get for their money. For $799: An unpaid summer internship through Fast Track

Hungry to help – Register-Guard
SPRINGFIELD — An all-too-familiar scene to motorists in the metro area — a person, down on his or her luck, standing at a busy intersection or freeway off-ramp, clutching a cardboard sign soliciting donations — got a new twist Saturday. More

Not So Fast: Broadband Service Rip-Offs – Hartford Courant
Mike Mlikotin of Venice , Calif., wanted to know what he was really being offered after Verizon Communications Inc. included a pitch for its broadband service in his most recent phone bill. It said that Mlikotin, 75, could lock in a lifetime rate of

Spotlight: Beware the tax refund loan – Atlanta Journal Constitution
And yet, 8.4 million low- and moderate-income taxpayers squandered a collective $806 million in 2008 for immediate access to their refunds, according to a new report from two national consumer advocacy groups. Consumers shortchanged themselves by

‘Fast Money’ Recap: Market Melt-up – Street.Com
Gary Kaminsky said on CNBC ’s “Fast Money” TV show on that he believes the market is entering a “melt-up” phase similar to the one in November and December. He said that is going to leave portfolio managers going to sleep at nights with only one

Alleged scammer charged with theft – Everett Herald
LYNNWOOD — Prosecutors on Friday accused a Seattle woman of scamming another woman out of $60,000 under the ruse of trying to donate money to a charity. Investigators believe the Snohomish County woman is just one of several people targeted by

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