Word: paper
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Megan F. Raymond '01 is one such person. When she purchased her spring break tickets over the computer, she was asked whether she wanted an E-ticket or a paper copy. Raymond says she chose the paper option because she felt safer with a physical ticket in hand...
Saltzberg says it is "hell on earth" to changea non-refundable E-ticket. But airline agentsdisagree. Kennedy of Delta Airlines says it is noharder to change an E-ticket than a regularticket, since Delta requires its customers to makeboth paper and electronic changes in person at theairport. USAirways, however, simplifies thisprocess by allowing E-tickets to be changed overthe phone. The agent will require a confirmationnumber and a credit card number to guarantee thatthe customer is really who he or she claims...
...strategy, which he appears determined to stick around to oversee. That's new stuff for Dunlap, 60, a churn-around pro who in the past has followed swift cost cuts with the well-timed sale of his company. The formula worked wonders for shareholders in 1994-95 at Scott Paper, where he cut the head count 35%. The stock tripled. The script was being rewritten at Sunbeam, where the stock has quadrupled...
...Dunlap a new three-year contract granting him 300,000 shares and a staggering 3.75 million stock options--one of the 10 largest option grants ever, according to compensation experts SCA Consulting. That is on top of one he got in '96, a package now worth $130 million on paper. The new package, barely a month old, has already yielded Dunlap paper profits of $73 million. Never shy, Dunlap is quick to say he is well worth...
John F. Kennedy Jr. expects his political magazine George "will turn a profit in 1999 -- a year ahead of estimates," reports the New York Post. Speaking to the paper, the publisher cited the movies "Wag the Dog" and "Primary Colors" as having heightened the public's awareness of how cool the Washington arena can be. "All of a sudden," Kennedy told the Post, "the connection between politics and pop culture became vivid...