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...serve their clients--other departments that have legal issues--and they are not connected to any revenue-generating part of the business. Kirshbaum wonders if they will be criticized as unresponsive if they take off one afternoon. She admires the freedom the employees in the ROWE program seem to enjoy. She changed to a four-day schedule after the birth of her second child last year and struggles every day with the push of work and the pull of family. Still, she is not convinced that ROWE will work for her. She already checks e-mail and voice mail...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Reworking Work | 7/18/2005 | See Source »

...course, they can all speak fluent English, and most of the TV shows, music, and books they enjoy are in the language of the Saesneg (English) But to them it is a necessary evil...

Author: By Aria S.K. Laskin, | Title: A Tongue Of Their Own | 7/15/2005 | See Source »

...We’re like you lot,” Owain told us (meaning Canadian, as Marissa and I are). “We take and enjoy the good bits, and leave them the shite. Charlotte Church, for example, they can keep. So we get the best of both worlds...

Author: By Aria S.K. Laskin, | Title: A Tongue Of Their Own | 7/15/2005 | See Source »

...least people like Shimogaki?struggling nobly in the face of adversity?enjoy a measure of sympathy from their countrymen. In comparison, no consequence of Japan's restructuring has so vexed the country as the rise of the "freeter"?the name for a highly educated young person who seems to have it all but stops trying. Because a college education has become less likely to guarantee lifetime employment, the sons and daughters of baby boomers have increasingly resorted to taking part-time or temporary jobs without high pay or much chance of job development. (Coined by a job-placement magazine, "freeter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Deepening Divide | 7/11/2005 | See Source »

...from spending money on social programs and infrastructure that could help reduce poverty and corruption. What can the West do? Developed countries like Ireland should proactively focus on bettering the lives of would-be immigrants in their home countries. Debt relief is a good place to start. Westerners enjoy freedoms and privileges that are alien to Africans. It is time for the West to start exporting those benefits to the less fortunate. Lulufa Kundul Vongtau Lagos, Nigeria

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters | 7/11/2005 | See Source »

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