PODCAST: Ben Bernanke speaks, ‘The Hunger Games’ takes off
It's day one of Supreme Court arguments over President Barack Obama's health care reform law. Twenty-six states are challenging the law — parts of which are already in place. Apollo Group, which owns the University of Phoenix, is expected to announce earnings today, and analysts aren't expecting big things. It's been 10 years since the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School opened a satellite campus in San Francisco. To mark the occasion, the business school has moved to a bigger — and shinier — facility.

“The Hunger Games” brought in more than $200 million around the world, making it the biggest opening ever for a non-sequel film.
Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke spoke just a few minutes ago. He said the unemployment rate has been declining faster than expected. But he said the job market still has a long way to go: “Discussions of the labor market at this juncture have a glass half empty/glass half full kind of tone. Recent improvements are improving, but as I’ve noted, the jobs market is still far from normal by many measures.” Bernanke said the U.S. economy needs to grow faster to get everybody working again.
To the Arab Shooting Championships in Kuwait, where a Kazakhstan shooter won a gold medal. And instead of playing the country’s national anthem, the event organizers played the spoof anthem from the movie “Borat” instead. The organizers apologized, said the mistake was unintentional and played the correct national anthem afterward.
The Journal of Management and Marketing Research did a study looking at which technological gadgets U.S. households adopted the fastest. Everything from cell phones, to VCRs, to personal computers, and ranked them by the number of households that were using them seven years after they hit store shelves. Coming in at number 1: The boom box. The cassette player kind. More than 60 percent of households had one for cell phones, that number was 10 percent personal computers? Less than 5 percent