Word: hire
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...undergraduate tuition, room and board leaping toward $30,000 per year, the administration should direct a good portion of the new revenues either to halting the rapid rise in student costs or to dramatically increasing the quality of student life and education. Sixty million dollars could be used to hire more teaching fellows and train them better, to thoroughly renovate the MAC or to hire new professors. Harvard's really in the money now. Let's hope that students reap the rewards of HMC's Wall Street magic...
...trouble gathering enough petitions to get it on the ballot; California initiatives have become a business, and no initiative since Prop. 13 has succeeded without the help of an expensive signature-gathering firm. Republican powers in Sacramento and Washington came in at the last minute with the money to hire professionals and save the initiative. Their motive was practical: the initiative looked as if it might be popular enough to pull Republican candidates (including the presidential one) to victory...
...appease the members of the Harvard Square Defense Fund, I'm sure that Taco Bell could maintain a subtle exterior, get some nice tables and hire a respectable mascot to keep in line with the rest of the area...
...said the University would not have to hire and train many additional personnel to make it possible...
...share information, they run their funds solo. The company has never favored investment committees like those at banks and at most other mutual funds; it prefers young, cocky managers and gives them independence. The classic Fidelity approach is, "Here's some money; now be a genius." Typically, a new hire out of college or business school starts as an analyst and is also given a "small" fund--something in the range of $100 million--to run. Within a few years, the analyst should become a full-time manager, overseeing a moderate-size fund that will be allowed to grow...