Comments about ‘'Money' section is ending; quality coverage to go on’
What You May Have Missed
Most Popular
Across Site
In Business
- Bottom 30 elementary schools in Utah by test...
- Top 30 elementary schools in Utah by test scores
- Gail Miller gets engaged to Salt Lake attorney
- Stalled job growth rattles U.S. economy
- Around world, Bloomberg soda war hard to swallow
- Crazy classifieds: Decorative weapons,...
- Make it a small: N.Y.'s ban on large sodas...
- KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
Most Commented
Across Site
In Business
- Make it a small: N.Y.'s ban on large...
37 - Couple can't retire because of $116,000...
19 - Stalled job growth rattles U.S. economy
10 - U.S. economy added 69,000 jobs in May,...
8 - Oil prices drop; will gas follow?
8 - Gail Miller gets engaged to Salt Lake...
8 - Health care costs rose more than inflation
5 - Around world, Bloomberg soda war hard...
4






The money section is the one section I look forward to reading every week. The timing could not be any worse because of what's happening around us. The Deseret News had put two financial stories in their top five local news stories of 2008.
I guess even the Deseret News is not immune to the economy...
Another reason to cancel my subscription and read USA Today on line. Why not conserve by limiting your BYU sports stories to four a day and use those reporters for something useful.
If you don't have the funds to have a Business/Money Section, then why not let BYU's school of Journalism and school of Business write one for you? These students are very bright and typically have a national and international perspective rather than a "small town" emphasis. I have always felt that the local universities have journalism students that should be "hired" to write stories and expand the news areas to keep the paper interesting with REAL news.....
DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments