Word: coutu
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...California, Correspondent Diane Coutu interviewed M.B.A.s at Stanford and the University of California at Los Angeles and Berkeley and found that today's business students are perhaps better rounded than their predecessors. Observes Coutu: "Though some M.B.A.s are clearly clever, brilliant was not the word that most often came to mind. These are achievers, people who worked hard in college to earn the chance to work harder in business school." Reporter-Researcher Denise Worrell interviewed business school deans at Dartmouth and Cornell and spoke with Wall Street executives, while Correspondent Patricia Delaney visited the University of Chicago and Northwestern...
...subjects provoke stronger feelings or arouse a wider spectrum of social and political attitudes than abortion. The TIME correspondents assigned to this week's cover story were faced with the challenge of reporting opposing viewpoints that are equally idealistic and heartfelt. Says Los Angeles Correspondent Diane Coutu: "Perhaps more than any other story, this one reminded me that the most difficult moral choices are seldom ones between good and evil, but almost always between good and the lesser good." Joyce Leviton interviewed pro-choice activists in Atlanta and experienced one of the many ironies in the abortion fight: during...
Japanese managers are famous for inspiring loyalty, long hours and high-quality production in their workers. But can they carry that management skill with them to other countries? TIME Correspondent D.L. Coutu last week visited a Sony television manufacturing plant in San Diego where Japanese executives help supervise 1,800 workers. Her report...
Reported by Erik Amfitheatrof/ London and Diane Coutu/ San Diego
...Racist, frontier justice," charged Raul Grijalva, a Tucson school district board member. In Mexico, ballads lamented the fate of the aliens, and President José López Portillo criticized the outcome. "There was a pretty hot feeling," George Patterson, a civil engineer in Douglas, told TIME Correspondent Diana Coutu. "People were afraid to cross the line into Mexico because they were after the gringos...