Word: sudden
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...sudden, Bill Gates, Harvard's most famous dropout, has coughed up $25 million for, guess what, a new computer science/engineering building. Now many of you may think I'm implying that Satan somehow persuaded Gates to carry out Satan's side of the unholy bargain allegedly made so many years ago behind a closed office door. But the answer is not that complex. The simple fact is that Bill Gates is not a tool of the antichrist. He is, in fact, the antichrist himself. And all the proof this journalist needs is contained within an e-mail chain letter...
...some subtle communication about the new rules of engagement, the members of the press let Dole know they would not call him "mean" or a "hatchet man" if he were finally to get tough. Yet no one seems ready to re-examine private behavior, for example Dole's sudden divorce from his first wife or allegations about Clinton and Gennifer Flowers. In fact, under the current rule of confining scrutiny to "public character," only Clinton's is in play (Craig Livingstone, Whitewater pardons, Indonesian money), not Dole's (Nixon and Iran-contra pardons, Dwayne Andreas' money, former financial adviser David...
...these approaches will ultimately prove to be the key to conquering other immune disorders. But there's no mistaking the optimism that has taken hold among arthritis specialists. "I went for 15 years without anything new with which to treat my patients," Wiesenhutter says. "Now, all of a sudden, I have all these options...
...leave that hospital immediately!" Kranstover, 41, has been a nurse for 11 years, and was a cardiac nurse at a San Diego hospital the night a technician allowed a patient who had just suffered a heart attack to get out of bed and smoke a cigarette. "All of a sudden the patient's heart monitor showed ventricular fibrillation, a life-threatening condition in which you can die within minutes," says Kranstover. "I rushed in to resuscitate him. He almost didn't make...
...build Intel into one of America's most profitable corporations (while pocketing a few hundred million of his own in the process), but the inescapable--albeit unstated--message of this book is that Grove's tremendous success owes a substantial debt to fate. In a high-tech economy where sudden change is the norm, the book reminds us that it takes more than a good head for business to survive...