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Word: deale (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Executives like McColl and moguls like Weill operate in rarefied circles. But much of what they practice can apply to everyday investors and business people. In my book, Masters of the Universe: Winning Strategies of America's Greatest Deal Makers (HarperCollins), I've tried to capture key philosophies of 10 Wall Street superstars who have a collective net worth of $12 billion. They must know something, right...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mogul Moments | 5/3/1999 | See Source »

...best kind of deal is one that works out well for both sides," says Sumner Redstone, CEO of Viacom. AutoNation chairman H. Wayne Huizenga says, "You never know when you'll find yourself sitting across the negotiating table from that person again." In market terms: Forget the last fraction. Pigs get slaughtered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mogul Moments | 5/3/1999 | See Source »

...together on what they're going to say so the child is not given two different spiels," says Clayton Majete, a lecturer at New York City's Baruch College who studies interracial families. He suggests waiting for the children to raise the issue and then taking the time to deal with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Family: Multi-Colored Families | 5/3/1999 | See Source »

...best seller The City of Joy recapitulates in honeyed prose more than a dozen stories he covered in his long career in journalism. He interviews the bullfighter El Cordobes and retraces Mahatma Gandhi's last moments. Much of the narrative runs to the cloyingly inspirational, and a good deal of it challenges credulity. For example, Caryl Chessman, awaiting execution at San Quentin, is portrayed as an intellectual who speaks in finely wrought sentences as he discourses about crime prevention, citing Albert Camus ("What a writer!"). Oh, what a mess...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Thousand Suns | 5/3/1999 | See Source »

...this virtual-reality game, the game-pod looks like an animal kidney, and the plug (ugh) goes into a hole in your back. No big deal, says the game's creator (Jennifer Jason Leigh): "They do it in malls; it's like having your ears pierced." She might be a stand-in for the writer-director, who in Scanners, Videodrome, Crash and The Fly has dealt creepily and eloquently with the disintegration of mind and body. eXistenZ, where Leigh and Jude Law get into a virtual reality game and can't get out, is more modest than its current twin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: eXistenZ | 5/3/1999 | See Source »

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