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  2. What an extra $500 to $1,000 a month did for 8 families - AOL

    www.aol.com/extra-500-1-000-month-100301726.html

    I also used the money to help cover the cost of groceries when my food budget was depleted and to put gas in my tank. ... He’s receiving $500 a month for a year. Evans Buntley. Total funding ...

  3. SpyEye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpyEye

    SpyEye emanated from Russia in 2009 and was sold in underground forums for $500+ in which SpyEye advertised features such as keyloggers, auto-fill credit card modules, email backups, config files , Zeus killer, HTTP access, POP3 grabbers and FTP grabbers.

  4. 2020 stock market crash - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_stock_market_crash

    On 25 March, Asia-Pacific and European stock markets closed up, [430] [431] while the NASDAQ Composite closed down, but the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average also closed up (with the Dow posting its first consecutive gain since the previous month). [432] Oil prices rose, [433] and the yields on 10-year and 30-year U.S. Treasury ...

  5. List of The Donna Reed Show episodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_The_Donna_Reed...

    The Donna Reed Show is an American sitcom starring Donna Reed as the middle-class housewife Donna Stone. Carl Betz co-stars as her pediatrician husband Dr. Alex Stone, and Shelley Fabares and Paul Petersen as their teenage children, Mary and Jeff. 275 half-hour episodes were made, all in black-and-white.

  6. Cost of drug development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost_of_drug_development

    In an analysis of the drug development costs for 98 companies over a decade, the average cost per drug developed and approved by a single-drug company was $350 million. [3] But for companies that approved between eight and 13 drugs over 10 years, the cost per drug went as high as $5.5 billion. [3]

  7. Price fixing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_fixing

    Between 1995 and 2000, music companies were found to have used illegal marketing agreements such as minimum advertised pricing to artificially inflate prices of compact discs in order to end price wars by discounters such as Best Buy and Target in the early 1990s. It is estimated customers were overcharged by nearly $500 million and up to $5 ...