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WALL STREET JOURNAL Fed Writes Rules in Secrecy | While the Federal Reserve is making a push for transparency in its interest rate policies and emergency lending programs, it is operating behind closed doors as it writes rules for the financial system, The Wall Street Journal writes.
WALL STREET JOURNAL Fed Waits for a Clearer Read on the Economy | Federal Reserve officials are scheduled to meet on Tuesday, but it seems likely that they will wait to make any big policy decisions until the economic signals become clearer, The New York Times reports.
WALL STREET JOURNAL Fed Ties Aid to Economic Recovery | The New York Times reports: "The Federal Reserve opened a new chapter Thursday in its efforts to stimulate the economy, saying that it intends to buy large quantities of mortgage bonds, and potentially other assets, until the job market improves substantially.
WALL STREET JOURNAL Fed Delays Vote on Capital One Deal for ING Direct | The Federal Reserve postponed its meeting to vote on Capital One's $9 billion takeover of ING Direct until Monday.
WALL STREET JOURNAL Fed Says It Was Victim of Cyberattack | The Wall Street Journal reports: "The Federal Reserve acknowledged Tuesday night that it had suffered a cybersecurity breach, making it the latest government victim of hackers".
WALL STREET JOURNAL Fed Handed Out $1.2 Trillion in Loans to Wall Street | Wall Street banks and other companies received $1.2 trillion in emergency loans from the Federal Reserve during the financial crisis, Bloomberg News reports.
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And according to this morning's Wall Street Journal, the feds also want to know if Adelphia furnished its offices exclusively with products purchased from a Rigas-owned furniture shop.
According to the Courier-Journal, the feds spent $1.5 million in legal fees to deny her the $50,000 she sought in benefits.
They've been spoon-fed, spoon-fed, spoon-fed.
A 2008 report in The Lancet, the British medical journal, found that a baby that is partially breast-fed is 2.8 times as likely to die as a baby that is exclusively breast-fed for at least five months.
A study published online on April 5 in the journal Pediatrics concluded that if 90 percent of mothers breast-fed exclusively for at least six months, the United States would save $13 billion in medical costs and prevent 911 deaths every year.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com