Word: barretts
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...follow-up negotiations. Says one senior American official: "Both sides have moved to the recognition that the real importance of the summit will rest on what comes after it." Or, as Shultz put the point, "Life doesn't end in November." --By George J. Church. Reported by Laurence I. Barrett and Johanna McGeary/Washington and James O. Jackson/Moscow ON THE TABLE...
...capital, Correspondent Alessandra Stanley helped to cover the White House and later the Bethesda Naval Hospital. White House Correspondent Laurence Barrett, drawing on his five years of Ronald and Nancy Reagan-watching, was aided by Correspondent Barrett Seaman in collaring Administration aides. For News Editor Blackman, who first alerted us to the story, the events of last week brought a sense of déjà vu. As a Washington-based Associated Press correspondent in 1981, she filed the first news bulletin that Ronald Reagan had been shot...
...easily by those correspondents who seem to specialize in baiting officials. With the Great Communicator still on the mend, the testiness that Speakes displays in suffering reporters, fools or otherwise, could crimp the ability of the White House to get its story across. --By James Kelly. Reported by Barrett Seaman/Washington
...that Intel has fallen far behind its rivals in putting chips in cell phones and other wireless devices. "They have been talking the talk in communications; they haven't walked the walk." Indeed, Intel's communications division is still losing money, despite a $10 billion investment since 2001. Barrett and Otellini say the division is a work in progress...
...maturing, that the competition is cutting into Intel's lead. Yet the company has managed to keep growing. Despite AMD's recent resurgence, Intel's position in the PC-chip business remains unchallenged, with a market share of nearly 90%. It is also a step ahead thanks to Barrett's farsighted investments in manufacturing. While AMD has one major semiconductor plant, Intel has four placed strategically around the world, churning out chips 24 hours a day. And unlike PC manufacturers and retailers, who have to deal with wafer-thin margins, Intel--thanks to its dominant position--enjoys a 55% profit...