Word: files
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...study committee member Cob Carlson, who had a green file folder labelled “eminent domain” poking out of his bag last night, said that so far the city has been less than receptive to the neighborhood’s wishes...
...liked, you had to go to your computer to make a digital copy. No more. Just plug the PoGo! RipFlash ($198) into the headphone jack or Line-Out of any music system (CD player, radio, tape deck), and RipFlash's software will convert the song into an MP3 file on the fly, as it is playing. Don't forget to buy the recording, however. Musicians need to make a living too. SPY RAM James Bond would have loved this crafty little item. Targus' Go-Anywhere ($80 to $150) looks like one of those highlighters students use to underscore their textbooks...
...years after the 1995 strike - a result, he believes, of the 4% wage hike that was agreed on. He estimates that for every 1% of increased wages, the economy will lose 1% employment as companies invest in high-tech machinery or transfer jobs to Eastern Europe. "The rank-and-file not only are not concerned about unemployment," he says, "but also it seems they are not worried about their own jobs." To maintain employment, he notes, wage settlements would have to be less than the growth in GDP, which was .6% last year. Another worry for IG Metall...
...sergeant, actor and, briefly, husband to Shirley Temple; of emphysema; in Burbank, Calif. Agar was 24 when a friend enlisted him in 1945 to escort Temple, then 16, to a party. The two married and three years later had a daughter, but Agar's drinking led his wife to file for divorce in 1949. He appeared with Temple in John Ford's cavalry classic Fort Apache and went on to a film career that included westerns, war films and a host of grade-B horror flicks, including Revenge of the Creature and The Brain from Planet Arous...
...institutional settings such as schools and businesses and via a handful of pay networks that serve hotels, cafes, airports and convention centers. The benefits are obvious to the traveling exec who logs on to his corporate network from an airport lounge, downloads the latest revision of a huge PowerPoint file and arrives fresh and unmussed at his presentation...