Word: sheetings
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Neil LaBute's rep, or rap sheet, is as a chronicler of cruelty. The two films he has written and directed (In the Company of Men, Your Friends and Neighbors) and his two best-known theater pieces (Bash: Latterday Plays and The Shape of Things) are cunning investigations into the way people hurt people. Now, in his version of A.S. Byatt's Booker prizewinning novel, Possession: A Romance, he has ventured into Merchant-Ivory territory: that foreign country called the English past, where passion bursts from the corset of propriety and love is the most beautiful work two poets...
...strategy, the odds are better. That's why Majcher likes Gateway, an unpopular view among some analysts. Its stock is trading 95% off its peak, after a series of missteps. Majcher expects PC sales to pick up eventually. With zero debt and $1 billion in cash on its balance sheet, Gateway is an unlikely candidate for bankruptcy...
...comment on the specifics, Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson, who heads the corporate-fraud strike force, said that "some cases are more complex than others." Even with prosecutors laboring on the Enron Task Force, getting a handle on the company's complicated structure and litany of off-balance-sheet partnerships is no small feat...
Even as WorldCom's future kept looking rosier to Grubman (see chart), its balance sheet, its "now," was imploding. At the end of 1999, the company claimed $10.3 billion in current assets and $30.3 billion in current liabilities and long-term debt. By year-end 2001, current assets had shrunk to $9.2 billion, while current and long-term debt had swollen to $39.2 billion. Graham liked companies whose current assets were at least twice their current liabilities. This measure, called the current ratio, tells you the working-capital cushion a company has at its disposal. Graham also believed that long...
...Tycho Schalken, doesn't come at you like a comicbook. You push the contents out of an open-ended cover sleeve. Into your lap plops an eight-and-a-half-foot-long piece of shiny cardstock that has been folded back and forth, accordion-style. Each side of the sheet contains a story by one of the artists, which because of the folding, means the book has no front or back and the end of one turns over to the beginning of the next in a Mobius-loop of comix reading...