Word: jacksons
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...them with assistance. But some critics say these were not enough. "The guidelines did not help clear up the confusion that's out there, and did not really apply to what goes on in the real world," says Michael Lotito, managing partner in the San Francisco law firm of Jackson Lewis, which represents management in labor disputes. EEOC Commissioner Paul Miller counters that the guidelines did raise awareness of psychiatric disabilities on the part of employers but were not intended to offer specific remedies...
...that wasn't all Chicago was losing, as it will begin to realize this week. Though Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf and general manager Jerry Krause knew that Michael Jordan and head coach Phil Jackson were unlikely to return, they had held out hope. And they couldn't stem the player exodus that would follow Jordan's retirement. Suddenly, with the season starting on Feb. 2, the Bulls had only four signed players. If they didn't do something fast, it was going to be really easy for opponents to double team Toni Kukoc, now their premiere player. Here...
...final owners' meeting before the Jan. 6 deadline set for canceling the NBA season. From the plane he tries to call Jordan who, he discovers, is in the Bahamas playing golf. He phones Jordan's agent, David Falk, who can't reach his client. Reinsdorf then calls Jackson at his new house in upstate New York to ask whether he won't change his mind about coaching. Jackson pleasantly chuckles a no, probably holds back on offering a koan about one-year contracts...
...Bulls announce that Tim Floyd, hired at the end of last season as Jackson's likely replacement, is finally anointed the new head coach. Until now, Floyd kept most of his stuff in boxes stacked up in the hall outside the coach's office and called himself a consultant. Chicago remains obsessed with Jordan's retirement. The Sun Times observes that he'd be a great politician. The Tribune, in a completely earnest front-page story, suggests that Jordan could become an astronaut...
While Microsoft would like a win here, Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson hasn't exactly been sympathetic to the company; the software Goliath is almost certainly looking to a higher court for vindication. "The court of appeals and the Supreme Court have shown themselves recently to be very reluctant to rule against companies in antitrust cases," notes Cohen. For now, Gates can keep those Hail Mary plays...