Wall Street Gets The Blues

American taxpayers awoke Wednesday to learn they may end up owning one of the world's largest insurers. They might now lose some sleep wondering whether the government's $85 billion loan to American International Group was a wise investment. If the gamble succeeds, the company nurses itself back to health, unhinged financial markets calm down, and taxpayers turn a profit. If it fails, the American public feels the hit. American taxpayers awoke Wednesday to learn they may end up owning one of the world's largest insurers. They might now lose some sleep wondering whether the government's $85 billion loan to American International Group was a wise investment. If the gamble succeeds, the company nurses itself back to health, unhinged financial markets calm down, and taxpayers turn a profit. If it fails, the American public feels the hit. American taxpayers awoke Wednesday to learn they may end up owning one of the world's largest insurers. They might now lose some sleep wondering whether the government's $85 billion loan to American International Group was a wise investment. If the gamble succeeds, the company nurses itself back to health, unhinged financial markets calm down, and taxpayers turn a profit. If it fails, the American public feels the hit. American taxpayers awoke Wednesday to learn they may end up owning one of the world's largest insurers. They might now lose some sleep wondering whether the government's $85 billion loan to American International Group was a wise investment. If the gamble succeeds, the company nurses itself back to health, unhinged financial markets calm down, and taxpayers turn a profit. If it fails, the American public feels the hit. American taxpayers awoke Wednesday to learn they may end up owning one of the world's largest insurers. They might now lose some sleep wondering whether the government's $85 billion loan to American International Group was a wise investment. If the gamble succeeds, the company nurses itself back to health, unhinged financial markets calm down, and taxpayers turn a profit. If it fails, the American public feels the hit. American taxpayers awoke Wednesday to learn they may end up owning one of the world's largest insurers. They might now lose some sleep wondering whether the government's $85 billion loan to American International Group was a wise investment. If the gamble succeeds, the company nurses itself back to health, unhinged financial markets calm down, and taxpayers turn a profit. If it fails, the American public feels the hit. American taxpayers awoke Wednesday to learn they may end up owning one of the world's largest insurers. They might now lose some sleep wondering whether the government's $85 billion loan to American International Group was a wise investment. If the gamble succeeds, the company nurses itself back to health, unhinged financial markets calm down, and taxpayers turn a profit. If it fails, the American public feels the hit. American taxpayers awoke Wednesday to learn they may end up owning one of the world's largest insurers. They might now lose some sleep wondering whether the government's $85 billion loan to American International Group was a wise investment. If the gamble succeeds, the company nurses itself back to health, unhinged financial markets calm down, and taxpayers turn a profit. If it fails, the American public feels the hitAmerican taxpayers awoke Wednesday to learn they may end up owning one of the world's largest insurers. They might now lose some sleep wondering whether the government's $85 billion loan to American International Group was a wise investment. If the gamble succeeds, the company nurses itself back to health, unhinged financial markets calm down, and taxpayers turn a profit. If it fails, the American public feels the hit. American taxpayers awoke Wednesday to learn they may end up owning one of the world's largest insurers. They might now lose some sleep wondering whether the government's $85 billion loan to American International Group was a wise investment. If the gamble succeeds, the company nurses itself back to health, unhinged financial markets calm down, and taxpayers turn a profit. If it fails, the American public feels the hit.

Attach on Embassy in Yemen

On a quiet Ramadan morning, a few people lined up outside the U.S. Embassy to wait for visas while most residents slept late in the Yemeni capital to cut short the Muslim holy month's daytime fast. Suddenly, chaos erupted. Militants linked to al-Qaida, some dressed in military uniforms, pulled up at a checkpoint and started blasting guards with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. Amid the fight, a vehicle packed with explosives sped toward the embassy's main gates erupting into a ball of fire when it hit a concrete barrier outside the complex. On a quiet Ramadan morning, a few people lined up outside the U.S. Embassy to wait for visas while most residents slept late in the Yemeni capital to cut short the Muslim holy month's daytime fast. Suddenly, chaos erupted. Militants linked to al-Qaida, some dressed in military uniforms, pulled up at a checkpoint and started blasting guards with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. Amid the fight, a vehicle packed with explosives sped toward the embassy's main gates erupting into a ball of fire when it hit a concrete barrier outside the complex. On a quiet Ramadan morning, a few people lined up outside the U.S. Embassy to wait for visas while most residents slept late in the Yemeni capital to cut short the Muslim holy month's daytime fast. Suddenly, chaos erupted. Militants linked to al-Qaida, some dressed in military uniforms, pulled up at a checkpoint and started blasting guards with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. Amid the fight, a vehicle packed with explosives sped toward the embassy's main gates erupting into a ball of fire when it hit a concrete barrier outside the complex. Militants linked to al-Qaida, some dressed in military uniforms, pulled up at a checkpoint and started blasting guards with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. Amid the fight, a vehicle packed with explosives sped toward the embassy's main gates erupting into a ball of fire when it hit a concrete barrier outside the complex. On a quiet Ramadan morning, a few people lined up outside the U.S. Embassy to wait for visas while most residents slept late in the Yemeni capital to cut short the Muslim holy month's daytime fast. Suddenly, chaos erupted. Militants linked to al-Qaida, some dressed in military uniforms, pulled up at a checkpoint and started blasting guards with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. Amid the fight, a vehicle packed with explosives sped toward the embassy's main gates erupting into a ball of fire when it hit a concrete barrier outside the complex. Militants linked to al-Qaida, some dressed in military uniforms, pulled up at a checkpoint and started blasting guards with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. Amid the fight, a vehicle packed with explosives sped toward the embassy's main gates erupting into a ball of fire when it hit a concrete barrier outside the complex. On a quiet Ramadan morning, a few people lined up outside the U.S. Embassy to wait for visas while most residents slept late in the Yemeni capital to cut short the Muslim holy month's daytime fast. Suddenly, chaos erupted. Militants linked to al-Qaida, some dressed in military uniforms, pulled up at a checkpoint and started blasting guards with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. Amid the fight, a vehicle packed with explosives sped toward the embassy's main gates erupting into a ball of fire when it hit a concrete barrier outside the complex. Militants linked to al-Qaida, some dressed in military uniforms, pulled up at a checkpoint and started blasting guards with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. Amid the fight, a vehicle packed with explosives sped toward the embassy's main gates erupting into a ball of fire when it hit a concrete barrier outside the complex. On a quiet Ramadan morning, a few people lined up outside the U.S. Embassy to wait for visas while most residents slept late in the Yemeni capital to cut short the Muslim holy month's daytime fast. Suddenly, chaos erupted. Militants linked to al-Qaida, some dressed in military uniforms, pulled up at a checkpoint and started blasting guards with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. Amid the fight, a vehicle packed with explosives sped toward the embassy's main gates erupting into a ball of fire when it hit a concrete barrier outside the complex.