Word: jobses
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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No longer. Today Bradford is a poster boy for the barely begun--and some would say doomed--effort to move most welfare clients off the dole and into decent jobs. As a graduate of a six-week welfare-to-work program sponsored by Marriott Corp., Bradford has a foot on...
Regaining traction will require what Jobs last week called "a new paradigm." Just what this might consist of, though, is unclear. Build low-cost network computers? Split up into hardware and software siblings? Or just rely on next year's expected release of the post-Mac operating system, Rhapsody, based...
Microsoft always is, and that's why Microsoft almost always wins. Whether Jobs can flourish by bargaining with the master is very much open to question. Can Apple survive? Sure, and the spotted owl will probably hang in there too. The Mac remains the most usable, intuitive operating system around...
The magnitude of the task has come home to President Clinton, who has been pleading with corporate America to hire welfare recipients. This week he takes his case to St Louis to meet with leaders of many of the more than 500 companies--from Boeing to Anheuser-Busch--that belong...
Elsewhere, machine shops in the Midwest are chronically short of skilled labor. Enter the Chicago Manufacturing Institute, a largely federally financed training center that each year graduates up to 300 machine operators and industrial inspectors, many of them former welfare recipients. More than 90% of the graduates swiftly land jobs...