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Is the cure fatal?
It is a whole new ball of wax in Europe these days.
Is Europe the new Japan?
What if Europe turned out to be the new Japan?
Jobs no boost for Obama
If President Barack Obama is going to base his re-election campaign on touting his record on jobs, he's going to have criticism coming at him left and right
Tough choices in Greece
Greece's latest economic proposal makes perfect sense, at least to Athens; not so much for the international community.
Democrats: 'Told ya so'
The $2 billion debacle at JPMorgan Chase is empowering Democrats strut in front of microphones, a bit smug, and proclaim, "I told ya so."
Facebook's faceoff
U.S. automaker General Motors, one of Facebook's biggest accounts, is quitting the social media Web site, saying it is not cost effective to advertise there.
A data deluge
After a short data drought, investors will look at critical reports from Europe and the United States Tuesday.
Marketing a blunder
Multibillion-dollar losses at JPMorgan Chase turned into losses of personnel even as the firm's top executive kept up the apologies.
Who feels safer now?
Congratulations to JPMorgan & Chase. This is said with all sincerity.
Tearing up the contract
Debt troubles in Europe that looked like they were about to end now look precisely the opposite.
So long, eurozone
The first major test of the eurozone looks to many to be boiling down to blind faith versus the power of the vote.
Push comes to shove
When the people take charge, the politicians will follow works fairly well when the people are not really, really angry.
France sends a message
Election results in France announced Monday put the austerity budget strategy led by Germany in a semi-precarious position.
The fine print on jobs
It's hard to ignore jobs data.
Keeping rates intact
The European Central Bank said it would keep its overnight lending rate at 1 percent, the most commonly expected choice out of three.
Looking for QE3
The Automatic Data Processing Inc. jobs report is already pulling on stocks, with figures that are bound to jolt markets Wednesday.
The bottom line: Jobs
Where was the International Labor Organization going to sit when it came to figuring out a strategy to get economies moving again?
Starving a cold
If a civil service worker in Spain losses his or her job -- and the odds are good it would be a forced retirement – the chances of replacing that worker are nearly zero.
Corporations make a move
Corporate reports kept U.S. stock markets humming this week.
Voters and Chrysler
U.S. automaker Chrysler's quarterly report said it made the largest profit since its bankruptcy, earning four times what it made in the first quarter of 2011.
Apple's big secret
Here's a twist: Apple, the world's most valuable company, said that it nearly doubled profits in its second quarter with a huge lift from sales in China.
Walmart's woes
The New York Times took a sizable swipe at Walmart on Sunday, publishing an article alleging extensive use of bribery to develop stores in Mexico.
A thin recovery
The economic slowdown is feeling more abrupt each day, as it shows up in stock markets in Europe, Asia and on Wall Street.
Going nowhere fast
On Monday and Wednesday, the journalists are cynical. On Tuesday and Thursday, it's the politicians turn.
Is Spain next?
The shadow that Spain cast across the European economic landscape for the past three years is turning itself into a three-dimensional problem.
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Protesters, police clash at NATO summit Notable deaths of 2012 2012 Billboard Music Awards
The 137th Preakness Stakes Annual Solar eclipse occurs in U.S. Chen Guangcheng arrives in the U.S.
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Members of the Army's Old Guard place flags at Arlington National Ceremtery
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U.S. flags are seen in the rucksack of a soldier with the Army's 3d U.S. Infantry Regiment, The Old Guard, as he places flags at gravesites in Arlington National Cemetery as part of the Flags-In Memorial Day ceremony on May 24, 2012 in Arlington, Virginia. American flags were placed at each of the more than 220,000 grave markers in honor of those who served and Memorial Day. UPI/Kevin Dietshc