Word: boss
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...Indeed, the 2004 study said women had "voluntarily donated oocytes ... and no financial reimbursement in any form was paid." But last spring, two of Hwang's researchers let slip to a journalist working for Nature that they had donated their own eggs--which raised questions, since Hwang was their boss, about whether they had been coerced...
Time Inc.'s new editor-in-chief, just the sixth in the line that began with Henry Luce, is John Huey. He has been our editorial director and succeeds his boss, Norman Pearlstine, who oversaw TIME, PEOPLE, SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, FORTUNE and our many other titles through 11 eventful years. These men have devoted their lives to great journalism and have formed one of the most effective editorial partnerships ever...
...Andrew Card told his boss he thought it would. He assumed that the President's father would be an easy sell. And Card had been taking a lot of calls from Clinton--calls that came in late on Sunday nights, sometimes early in the morning--and he had been struck by how much Clinton seemed to know about the tsunami disaster and how much he wanted to help. Card knew that both men still had most of the world's leaders, moguls and wise men on their speed dials and could make things happen quickly. And so Card made some...
...same one that has driven him since he was ordained in his native Bavaria. But Ratzinger's essential beliefs were rarely seen more clearly than during - and after - his predecessor's final hours. On the evening of April 1, a veteran aide to Ratzinger recounted how, that morning, his boss had gathered together employees in the doctrinal office for a reciting of the rosary, and then informed them of his visit to see John Paul. "I've never seen him that emotional," the Vatican official said. Ten days later, it fell to Ratzinger to lead the service for John Paul...
...month, he more than pays for his $100 million a year in operating expenses, which also goes toward production costs for his show and two 24-hour channels he plans to program. Throw in ad revenues and he?s raking in profits for his corporate parent. Indeed, Sirius boss Mel Karmazin aims to generate $100 million in ad revenues by 2007, up from less than $10 million now. Stern is essential to that equation. Karmazin, after all, has long had faith in the nation?s premier radio bad boy to bring in the bucks, going back decades to their days...