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...this clever business handbook are the outsize ceos and captains of industry who take up all the air and space in every room they enter. Bing offers advice on the care and feeding of such corporate pachyderms, but, more important, he tells you how not to get trampled. Drain yourself of all hope, he says. Don't expect anything--especially kindness. And never, ever, criticize. The elephant, you see, is really an overgrown toddler who still thinks the world revolves around it. Elephants know a great deal about a great many things, says Bing, but nothing about human feelings. Especially...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Throwing The Elephant: Zen And The Art Of Managing Up | 4/8/2002 | See Source »

...odds of D.C. picking up the slack now and helping the states out? The same odds that John Ashcroft's singing will land him a performance at Carnegie Hall. It might have been possible when the federal government was running a large surplus. But thanks to the drain of 9/11 and the soft economy, this year's money is gone. More importantly, the president's tax cut has made sure surpluses won't be coming back for a decade or more. The states are on their own. Sadly, of course, so are the uninsured...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surviving the Medicaid Morass | 4/5/2002 | See Source »

...century ago, the suffrage movement and the temperance crusade were largely one and the same. Many temperance activists wanted the vote, if only to enact prohibition; and suffragists applauded the temperance movement's attacks on taverns, in which axes were deployed to smash open kegs and let the beer drain away on the floor. The connection between the causes seemed obvious at the time: drunken men frittered away the family's paycheck and then went home to abuse their wives. The idea that women might have drinking problems would have seemed as outrageous, in about 1870, as the concept...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Libation as Liberation? | 4/1/2002 | See Source »

What goes down the drain eventually bubbles up in rivers and streams, according to a U.S. Geological Survey report on 140 waterways in 30 states. The stuff comes from farms and factories, as well as toilets, sinks and medicine chests. Environmentalists fear that even trace amounts of some pollutants might increase resistance to antibiotics, disrupt reproductive cycles or act as carcinogens. But in most cases, scientists don't know enough about exposure to contaminants at minute quantities to say what dangers, if any, they pose. Among the 95 chemicals tracked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A River Runs Through It | 3/25/2002 | See Source »

...pedophile drain on Catholic coffers already is estimated to top $1 billion nationwide. Maine's church spent nearly $1 million to cover up past abuse allegations and is bracing for fresh claims against the two Portland priests. When Florida's Bishop of Palm Beach Anthony O'Connell resigned March 10, after revelations that he had fondled a student 25 years ago, church officials disclosed that they had handed the victim $125,000 to quash a lawsuit in 1996. In the past decade, four dioceses (see chart) have laid out $96.2 million in settlements. And these are only the ones that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Costs Of Penance | 3/25/2002 | See Source »

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