Word: jeffs
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...stretch their vocal range over the area traditionally reserved for women and victims of unfortunate bicycle accidents are often some of the most exhilarating singers around. Anyone who doubts this has clearly not discovered the ethereal wonders of Jeff Buckley or Thom Yorke, let alone Jimmy Sommerville. Alas, despite occasional exceptions like Tracy Chapman, the reverse doesn’t seem to be true nearly as often. Fortunately, Thalia Zedek, formerly the vocalist for Come and Uzi, has such a female baritone voice showcased on this album—part Leonard Cohen (whom she covers on the elegiac...
...usual, but it offered news, not Muzak. As Caroline sat patiently through her checkup, assistants kept giving the doctor updates on news from southern Manhattan. "Pace has been let out," one said finally. Pace University was mere blocks from ground zero, and Dr. Cronenberg's son, Jeff, was a student there. So the doctor was monitoring this carefully...
...spot didn't begin until after he won it. Living on airplanes, where he devours mystery novels and biographies (including David McCullough's John Adams), he has crisscrossed the globe to meet with employees, key customers, suppliers and investors, morphing the company's public face from Jack to Jeff in person. "I've used the time to transfer relationships," he says. "It's got to be done retail, face to face, and you've got to keep doing...
...grace, and his instincts are all right on the button," Welch said from his vacation home on Nantucket, where he's getting in some golf before his much anticipated book, Jack: Straight from the Gut, hits stores next week. "My report card comes out in another five years, when Jeff has taken this company to a whole new level, and people are saying, 'Is that all Jack...
...word: yes. Like dotcom flameouts Kozmo.com and Webvan, the Standard followed the mantra--first popularized by Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos--of Get Big Fast. Hundreds of reporters were hired. A New York City office opened. A second magazine, Grok, was launched (though quickly abandoned). Conference costs spiraled. Lease commitments for tony office space were more than $50 million. "We were very aggressive," editor in chief Jonathan Weber said last Friday from the magazine's suddenly empty offices. "We took funding from venture capitalists and had a high-growth strategy. It's clear from hindsight that wasn't the best idea...