Word: copely
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...been a good exchange of new ideas," said David B. Martens, vice president and chief operating officer of Buckner News Alliance. "Rosabeth Moss Kanter's [professor of business administration] lecture was a good way to learn how to cope with change...
...everyone agreed. Some blacks saw only partial justice. And some white policemen took the convictions of Koon and Powell as a slap in the face. But even among white cops, that feeling mingled with an almost giddy relief at the prospect of not having to cope with a riot on the scale of the one last year that left 53 people dead. "Everybody in Los Angeles is just happy that this cloud has finally been dispelled," said police captain Patrick Froehle. Many % blacks agreed. Said one woman, buying bacon at Sun's Market on Avalon Street, which was burned...
...situation demands an easy and effective system of classification. For the prefrosh who are visiting this weekend, a guide to Harvard's taxonomy is especially crucial. No explorer entering the virgin forest ever had to cope with such bewildering biodiversity...
...great fun of the day for secretaries is, of course, watching the office try to cope without them while they are on their long celebratory lunch. After watching your average boss break the copier, send an important document into fax limbo, crash the computer system and juggle twenty people on hold, it's easy to conclude that a Secretaries Week would lead to the shutdown of corporate America...
Japan will need more, not less, labor to cope with its declining birthrate and aging population. By 2007, the number of Japanese will begin to shrink; in that same year, 20% will be over 65, making the population the most aged in the world. That means Japan will have fewer workers to support the costly medical, social security and other needs of aging parents and grandparents...