Word: alberto
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...within days of spelling out exactly what he wanted to do, he made clear how he was going to do it. Bush immediately went about seizing the commanding heights of his government. Bush's trusted consigliere, Alberto Gonzales, is sent to take over the Justice Department. The White House counsel post and the Education Department are given over to close Bush advisers. Most important, Bush turns over the State Department-foreign-occupied territory in the view of most White Houses-to his closest foreign-policy confidant, Condoleezza Rice. Then he gives her job, National Security Council chief, to her deputy...
Bush's New Lawman What to expect from Alberto Gonzales--and why the Dems won't block...
...hard-charging executive like Alberto Ferraris, being named chief financial officer of a €7.6 billion company was a career-making moment - and he wasn't going to let a few nagging doubts stand in his way. Since the company was Parmalat, the Italian dairy-and-food conglomerate the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has charged with perpetrating "one of the largest and most brazen corporate financial frauds in history," and since Ferraris now faces charges of market rigging and issuing false information, he may wish he had heeded those doubts. But back in March 2003, he says, he knew...
...included in the list of creditors. "The risk for Parmalat is that if the international banks are cut out as creditors, they could make life very tough for the company when it emerges from bankruptcy next year," says one person close to the U.S. banks. FUNDING THE "BLACK HOLE" Alberto Ferraris wasn't the only one who thought highly of Calisto Tanzi. Until Parmalat collapsed, the 66-year-old founder was an almost legendary figure in Italy, viewed as a classic entrepreneur who built a world-class company from scratch. Soon after founding Parmalat as a dairy company...
...beard and beret, found in so many dorm rooms and poetry lounges. This is Ernesto Guevara de la Serna (Gael García Bernal) in his mid-20s, before he was Che. The film picks up Guevara’s life in 1951 as he embarks with his compatriot, Alberto Granado (Rodrigo de la Serna) on his travels—powered, initially, by the namesake motorcycle, of course—bound for the southern tip of South America. He is a far more accessible figure, and his journey radiates a certain lost-soul aura to which even a hardened capitalist...