Word: cooperatives
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...disagreed, of course, and his decision has paid off so handsomely that just last week the President announced that Cheney would be his running mate again in the 2004 campaign. Which shows that Karl Rove isn't the only one planning for the next election. --With reporting by Matthew Cooper, Karen Tumulty, Douglas Waller and Michael Weisskopf/Washington
...GOSSIP OF THE WEEK: Jeremy I. Cooper ’06 isn’t sure whether he wants to go back to his high school over Thanksgiving break. “There are a few teachers I’d like to see, but it would just be so weird,” he reflects...Mira F. Leonard ’05 got a huge kick out of last week’s Callbacks concert. “It was great,” she remarks...Will C. Benstein ’03 wishes they had cheddar cheese...
...Wellstone said, "I think my epitaph is going i*Ato read, 'We don't know what he did, but he sure looked tired.'" Says Kerrey: "Now I think his epitaph will be, 'We didn't realize what a good man he was until he was gone.'" --Reported by Matthew Cooper, Michael Duffy, Karen Tumulty and Douglas Waller/Washington
...legendary Studio 54. Reasoning that his nightclub's hip clientele would want to stay in hip hotels, he created such architectural landmarks as London's Sanderson and St. Martin's Lane. Now that concept is celebrated in an exhibition, "New Hotels for Global Nomads," at New York's Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum. Curator Donald Albrecht says it aims to explore the hotel, not just for cutting-edge architecture and interior design, but as a source of mystery and refuge in the urban wilderness. Look out for digital renderings of Jean Nouvel's Hotel Broadway in New York...
Thomas-Graham noted that most whistle-blowers in the recent frenzy of corporate scandal have been women, listing Enron’s Sharon Watkins, WorldCom’s Cynthia Cooper and the FBI’s Colleen Rowley as examples of women who warned their organizations of trouble and wrongdoing and were ignored...