Word: sun
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...obituaries had been written for New York Newsday, the Norfolk Ledger-Star in Virginia, the Baltimore Evening Sun and the 93-year-old Greenville Piedmont of South Carolina, while a grand total of 13,000 newspaper employees, 2.6% of the newspaper work force, lost their jobs or took buyouts. Downsizing, cost cutting, merging, closing: these catchwords not only dominated the papers' business pages but also became the stories of the newspapers themselves. IF YOU THINK THIS WAS A BAD YEAR, warned a headline in a newspaper trade magazine, BETTER GET USED...
...KADLEC, TIME's newest columnist, spent a decade covering Wall Street as a reporter, editor and columnist for USA Today (with a year off to edit the ill-fated St. Louis Sun newspaper and obsess over his beloved Cardinals). Kadlec's Money in Motion column will mix financial advice with stories about the personalities of today's Wall Street, which he describes as somewhat kinder and gentler than in the greed-filled '80s yet "still plenty exciting with the push to be global and America's renewed interest in mutual funds." This week he offers a skeptic's take...
...that Bill Clinton was "cramming" for his first encounter with Bob Dole. The challenger, for his part, spent most of the week at his condo in Bal Harbour, Florida, reading briefing books and scanning the cloudy skies for beneficial rays. (On Friday he gave up and opted for a sun lamp...
...things are incontrovertible. Vice President Al Gore announced the new encryption initiative at midweek, timed to coincide with support from an alliance of high-tech businesses that included such hardware heavyweights as IBM, Sun Microsystems and Hewlett-Packard. However, most of the big software makers--and every civil liberties group--still opposed...
First, when I say lighting, I don't just mean how bright it is in the lecture hall; experienced sleepers can doze on the surface of the sun. What I mean is the ratio of the lighting level on the stage/podium as compared to the seating area. It's hard to look from a well-lit place to a dark place; the converse is quite easy. So if the room is dark and a bunch of stage lights are pointing at the professor, it's beddy-bye time...