Word: partnering
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Kane, who said he learned business basics by taking courses at Bentley College, first invested in the family-owned yogurt operation Columbo. He entered into this venture with partner John H. Davison...
Imagine too what Microsoft can do. No company is a bigger threat, yet Microsoft is both partner and competitor for AOL. Case says it's a relationship based on "ambivalence and, to some extent, fear." Soon AOL will unveil new alliances with Microsoft that include everything from licensing the online magazine Slate--on AOL starting this fall--to becoming part of Microsoft's "Active Desktop," which will let AOL deliver information to Windows computers using new Microsoft technology. Pittman, for one, feels AOL holds a better hand: "Microsoft's destiny...
...than the physical presence of parents, the number of hours a day they're in the home. It's their emotional availability," says Resnick. Uh-oh. Are we spending $25 million to recycle the old saw about quality time, the one that says to the parent trying to make partner at the law firm, "Don't worry if you spend more time with your clients than with your child. Just bear down like a freight train during those precious moments you're actually there"? And they say our tax dollars are wasted...
...chief, has been piecing together the whereabouts of Henri Paul, the Ritz Hotel deputy security chief, in the hours before Paul took the wheel of the car in which he, Princess Diana and Dodi Fayed were killed. Sancton and his staff interviewed dozens of people, from Paul's tennis partner to bartenders to reluctant employees at the Ritz. This week, teaming up with the CNN/TIME Impact show, which airs Sunday at 9 p.m. E.T., Sancton spoke with an eyewitness who comforted injured bodyguard Trevor Rees-Jones and made the first emergency call to police. Says Sancton: "I've covered...
...marketing experts see few signs yet that boomers are prepared to accept advancing age. "They're still trying to find themselves, and there's no reason to assume they will give that up even when they're 72," says Ann Clurman, a partner at Yankelovich Partners, a research and marketing firm with headquarters in Connecticut. Adds Yankelovich managing partner J. Walker Smith: "A.A.R.P. is deadly scared of trying to deal with boomers' denial and not wanting to be members of the same organization that their parents are. Boomers are still struggling with just being grownups...