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...Stocks And Glass Houses First it was Donald Rumsfeld attacking "old Europe." Now Alfred Berkeley, vice chairman of the NASDAQ stock market, says that Europeans seek "to pull us down to their own miserable levels of opportunity and performance." He cast this hostile stone in a letter last week to the U.S. Financial Accounting Standards Board, lobbying against a proposal from the International Accounting Standards Board that would count stock options as expenses. As corporate scandals mounted last year, the idea got high-profile support from investors like Warren Buffett. But Berkeley's attack - he also slams accountants, "the shareholder...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A View To a Drill | 2/2/2003 | See Source »

...conviction that BGLTQ students are valuable members of the College community. The signs remind us that while Harvard is a fairly welcoming place for BGLTQ students, we still attend a university that excludes gender identity and expression from its nondiscrimination policy. We still live in a society that allows Donald Rumsfeld and friends to blackmail the Law School into allowing Judge Advocate General recruiters on campus. Perhaps the “safe space” signs are not quite as trivial as Smith would have us believe...

Author: By Marcel A.Q. Laflamme, | Title: BGLTSA Did Not Quelch Views of Others | 1/29/2003 | See Source »

...Baghdad. In doing so, he cemented his reputation as the Administration's most influential strategist. Since 1973, when he left his teaching job at Yale to join the Nixon Administration, Wolfowitz has served under every President except Clinton. Along the way, he has won some powerful patrons--including Donald Rumsfeld, his current boss, and Dick Cheney, who hired Wolfowitz as his No. 3 during the first Bush Administration...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bush's Brainiest Hawk | 1/27/2003 | See Source »

...Washington's refusal so far to sit down with Pyongyang at the bargaining table. They also want to give the diplomats time to tease out a solution that would avoid the imposition of sanctions, a move that North Korea has said would amount to an act of war. - By Donald Macintyre/Seoul...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Watch | 1/26/2003 | See Source »

...dispose of surplus or discontinued albums by selling them to middlemen for less than $1 per disc, according to industry executives. In most cases, artists who would ordinarily be paid royalties for album sales get nothing once their work is destined for the bargain bin or scrap heap, says Donald Passman, author of All You Need To Know About the Music Business and attorney to major acts such as Mariah Carey, Janet Jackson and R.E.M. Few musicians complain, how-ever, so "I don't think the record companies will get too concerned about it," says Giouw of the IFPI...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Zombie Discs | 1/20/2003 | See Source »

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