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Links included were live and functioning properly at time of publication. They may not necessarily remain so, and this is not under our control. In fact, some will become unreliable within only a day or two. Best to check our new stories daily and survey our previous headlines for an overview. Unfortunately, some of the stories to which we point appear to be inaccessible outside the United States. This means that access has been blocked by the respective news organizations, not by us.
Many leading publications, including the Christian Science Monitor and the New York Times recycle their URLs very frequently. As a consequence, by the time you attempt to read articles that we point to on NewWork News, their URL may bring up some other article entirely. A solution to this problem is not within our control, although we do want to continue telling you about their offerings. You're most likely to find their URLs working properly on our site around midday, Central Standard Time in the United States. By late in the day, you may be disappointed to find some unrelated article appearing on your screen.
One possible solution is to cut the wayward or nonfunctional URL back to its root in order to visit the publication's home page. Then, you may be able to do a search on their site and locate the article of interest. For instance, on September 30, 1999, we pointed to a New York Times story on slower economic growth during the second quarter. This story's URL, which worked on the day of publication, was http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/f/AP-Economy.html. However, this URL will not work now. Instead, you will get a message telling you about the newspaper's archives and other instructions for how you might find the article of interest. Another publication might not provide such convenient instructions, in which case, you could eliminate the last part of the URL and simply use http://www.nytimes.com/, which, as in this example, will take you to the paper's home page, where you may be able to search the publication's own archives.
Copyright © 1995-2007 Gary Johnson Communications. All rights reserved. BraveNewWorkWorld, NewWork, NewWork News, Careers in the NewWork World, WITNE, and WITNE: Women in the New Economy are trademarks of Gary Johnson Communications.