this program is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. captioning sponsored by wpbt susie: good evening everyone. my colleague tom hudson is off tonight. it was another ugly day on wall street. the dow plunged 520 points, wiping out all of yesterday s gains. in washington, president obama met with federal reserve chairman ben bernanke and treasury secretary geithner. no word yet on what they discussed. but here at the new york stock exchange, investors were dumping stocks on new worries about europe s debt crisis this time in france. here s how things looked by the closing bell: the dow was down 4.5%, a loss of 520 points. the nasdaq tumbled 101 points and the s&p 500 fell 52. volume remained heavy. on the big board, 2.1 billion shares were traded, and 3.3 billion on the nasdaq. so where do stocks go from here? suzanne pratt reports. reporter: on wall street these days, what goes down must go up. and down. and up. and so on. experts say
this program is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. captioning sponsored by wpbt susie: good evening everyone. my colleague tom hudson is off tonight. it was another ugly day on wall street. the dow plunged 520 points, wiping out all of yesterday s gains. in washington, president obama met with federal reserve chairman ben bernanke and treasury secretary geithner. no word yet on what they discussed. but here at the new york stock exchange, investors were dumping stocks on new worries about europe s debt crisis this time in france. here s how things looked by the closing bell: the dow was down 4.5%, a loss of 520 points. the nasdaq tumbled 101 points and the s&p 500 fell 52. volume remained heavy. on the big board, 2.1 billion shares were traded, and 3.3 billion on the nasdaq. so where do stocks go from here? suzanne pratt reports. reporter: on wall street these days, what goes down must go up. and down. and up. and so on. experts say
this program is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. captioning sponsored by wpbt susie: good evening everyone. my colleague tom hudson is off tonight. it was another ugly day on wall street. the dow plunged 520 points, wiping out all of yesterday s gains. in washington, president obama met with federal reserve chairman ben bernanke and treasury secretary geithner. no word yet on what they discussed. but here at the new york stock exchange, investors were dumping stocks on new worries about europe s debt crisis this time in france. here s how things looked by the closing bell: the dow was down 4.5%, a loss of 520 points. the nasdaq tumbled 101 points and the s&p 500 fell 52. volume remained heavy. on the big board, 2.1 billion shares were traded, and 3.3 billion on the nasdaq. so where do stocks go from here? suzanne pratt reports. reporter: on wall street these days, what goes down must go up. and down. and up. and so on. experts say
behind the headlines, former xerox c.e.o. anne mulcahy discusses her new role of helping women and children discusses her new role of helping women and children around the world. [ ] i m cokie roberts in for bonnie erbe. welcome to to the contrary . a discussion of news and social trends from diverse perspectives. up first, free contraception. birth control may soon be free to women as part of healthcare reform. this week the panel from the institute of medicine recommended insurance companies cover contraceptive medications and treatments fully with no co-pays, no cost sharing. experts say coverage for birth control is preventative and should be free to women through their insurance. opponents say this treats pregnancy like a disease and people should not be required to pay into insurance companies that provide birth control. health and human services secretary kathleen sebelius is expected to decide whether to enact the recommendations. congressman norton, you voted for
behind the headlines, former xerox c.e.o. anne mulcahy discusses her new role of helping women and children discusses her new role of helping women and children around the world. [ ] i m cokie roberts in for bonnie erbe. welcome to to the contrary . a discussion of news and social trends from diverse perspectives. up first, free contraception. birth control may soon be free to women as part of healthcare reform. this week the panel from the institute of medicine recommended insurance companies cover contraceptive medications and treatments fully with no co-pays, no cost sharing. experts say coverage for birth control is preventative and should be free to women through their insurance. opponents say this treats pregnancy like a disease and people should not be required to pay into insurance companies that provide birth control. health and human services secretary kathleen sebelius is expected to decide whether to enact the recommendations. congressman norton, you voted for