Word: firm
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Sure, there are other benefits, such as being able to share printers, scanners, fax machines and zip drives, and to be able to swap files instantly. But Net access, particularly high-speed access, say industry analysts, will be what really drives consumer demand. New York research firm Jupiter Communications predicts that one-fifth of American homes will have a digital subscriber line, cable modem and other high-speed pipe by 2002. You can bet that everyone in those homes--whether they like to play games, shop, chat, or trade stocks online--will want to share the big bandwidth...
...working for just one, two or even three different employers. In fact, the average number of job changes in a professional career is now hovering between eight and 10, and half of them are made by age 40, says John Challenger, CEO of Challenger, Gray & Christmas, a Chicago outplacement firm. And, of course, there is that all-important first job, as Kim's search suggests...
...JOINING IS NETWORKING Mingling with people who have formed an association around a common interest is as old a custom in job seeking as in politics. But be sure you are really willing to get involved. Consider Lawrence Tabas, 45, partner in the Philadelphia law firm of Obermayer Rebmann Maxwell & Hippel LLP, whose passion for local politics helped land him his current position. Tabas was running as a Republican for a city-council seat in 1991 when the chairman of his current law firm, Marvin Weinberg, a staunch Democrat who was backing Tabas' opponent, took notice of his vigorous, well...
...title of the hand-scribbled memo outlined Waste Management's goal in no uncertain terms: "Cadiz Kill." In 1995 Cadiz Inc., an agricultural firm based in Santa Monica, Calif., was leading opposition to Waste Management's proposal to build a mega-garbage dump near its property. So, like any other tactically thinking business, the country's largest trash hauler brought in a consultant to get things moving...
...potential conflict of interest emerged a few weeks ago when Nesson's co-instructor for the course, attorney Jerome Facher of the Boston firm Hale & Dorr, announced to the class that one of his partners had been approached by the University to handle litigation surrounding the Berkowitz case...