Word: wolfs
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Where does the whiz kid who's not cut out to manage people fit into this picture? Carol Rozwell, research director of the GartnerGroup E-Business Intelligence Services, suggests that companies create positions such as chief technology officer to allow the "lone wolf" to excel...
Intrigued? The best place to launch your hunt is eeggs.com run by Redmond, Wash., programmer David Wolf. Like Alice, Wolf had no idea what he was getting into when he started the site. "I thought there were maybe 10, 15 eggs," he says. It now gives instructions for cracking more than 1,500 software-based eggs. That's a heck of a lot of secret Narnias. And you'll never know how many more are out there until you start burrowing through that secret digital wardrobe...
...Republican insurgency on branding himself an outsider, a man whose integrity and authenticity prevented him from garnering the many party endorsements that befell his deep-pocketed opponent. Yet McCain is poised to become the most important and influential endorser the Bush campaign will likely receive. On Sunday McCain told Wolf Blitzer on CNN's "Late Edition" that he planned to begin stumping for Bush "sooner rather than later" - the strongest indication yet that the two sides have made amends. What he didn't say, however, was what concessions he sought or received in return for his blessings...
...looks like Naomi Wolf may have been worth her salary after all. After months of trailing rival George W. Bush, Al Gore has emerged as the candidate of choice among women voters, taking a lead of up to 10 percentage points in several polls. Bush's early popularity with women caught many pundits - and Gore himself - off-guard. Plenty of Democrats presumed that Gore could ride the coattails of President Clinton's persistent and, some would say, perplexing favor with the female electorate. Those who smugly waited for Clinton to simply hand off women voters to Gore were...
...early enough - and with enough force - that he was able to get his act together. "Gore recognized pretty quickly that he had to get out there and work hard for women voters," says Tumulty. And work he has. After hunkering down with a team of advisers, including feminist author Wolf, he's changed everything from his wardrobe to his talking points, bombarding women's groups with pointed talks on Social Security and women, health care and women, abortion rights and women. Bush, on the other hand, seems to be losing his grip on his female lead - a slip that should...