EDITORIAL: Heels dug in.(Editorial)

The News Review:

- EDITORIAL: Heels dug in.(Editorial)
- Loudoun Community Events Week
- Travel industry trots out driver incentives
- Giteau to become rugby’s $6 million man
- Corporate regulation
- Filmmakers stumble across a masterpiece in ‘Heavy Metal Parking…

EDITORIAL: Heels dug in.(Editorial)
Free with registration – Baltimore Sun – AccessMyLibrary.com – Apr 21, 2006
President Bush and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld’s loyal cadre of top officers have gone to such lengths to defend the Pentagon chief from attacks by a handful of retired generals that you can’t help but wonder whether the home-grown insurgents haven’t hit a nerve. He’s starting to look like the secretary of defensiveness.

Loudoun Community Events Week
Washington Post – Apr 20, 2006
-noon Saturdays through November, Fifth and Lee streets. Home-grown and homemade items by local producers. FAUQUIER HABITAT FOR HUMANITY BENEFIT, 8 a… , live auction at 6. Music during preview by In One Accord. $25 per couple; $15 per person. CABOOSE TOURS, all ages, 9-11 a.

Travel industry trots out driver incentives
USA Today – Apr 20, 2006
com for a $20 ethanol voucher that can be redeemed at participating gas stations from May 1 through Aug. The voucher deal for gas mixed with ethanol, an alternative fuel made from corn, is “a two-pronged effort,” says spokeswoman Nicole Nordbye, to help gas-conscious travelers and “promote a home-grown commodity. , where more than two-thirds of summer visitors arrive by car, lodges are renewing last year’s promotion of a $50 gas certificate, free bus passes and bike rentals and other sweeteners. More than 40 members of.

Giteau to become rugby’s $6 million man
The Age – Apr 21, 2006
“Although there is support for Matt in the corporate sectorhere, I think the figures being bandied about in WA are just sohuge it has the potential to just blow the contracting process outof the water,” Fagan told the ABC. “I certainly think mechanisms like a salary cap need to belooked at, and I think that I’d find support for that in both NewSouth Wales and Queensland. Fagan said it was becoming increasingly difficult for clubs toretain home grown talent. “Our offer was comparable to those of the other states but thecorporate sector’s jumped in and just put an astronomical figure infront of Matt Giteau by way of sponsorship, and that certainlyblows us out of the water,” Fagan said. With Force coach John Mitchell having conceded the squad’s depthis nowhere near what is required for Super 14, several players aswell as Giteau have been linked with a move west. Queensland Red Drew Mitchell has been touted as a possibletransfer, along with potential rugby league converts Ryan Cross andWillie Tonga.

Corporate regulation
economist.com – Apr 20, 2006
For younger firms, a NASDAQ listing was a crucial step on the way to becoming the next Microsoft. Today, however, foreign listings have become a rarity, especially on NASDAQ. Even some of America’s home-grown would-be Microsofts now list not in New York, but overseas, especially on London’s Alternative Investment Market. It used to be taken for granted in the United States that the country’s stockmarkets were the best-regulated in the world, and that their attraction to overseas companies was proof of the fact.

Filmmakers stumble across a masterpiece in ‘Heavy Metal Parking…
Free with registration – Blade – AccessMyLibrary.com – Apr 20, 2006
| Blade (Toledo, OH) (April, 2006). 20–Before co-workers passed viral videos e-mail to e-mail, before e-mail and the Internet itself — before the best place to find home-grown camcorder crack-ups w.

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