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...cash mergers is off the charts this year. "They don't want to buy shares with cash," he says of acquisitive CEOs. "They'd rather sell their own stock to make the deal." In similar fashion, companies now include hefty sums of stock options in the pay of an array of employees. Sure, it's what the people want. But technically, the company is selling. Biderman estimates there are $1 trillion worth of unexercised stock options out there, a staggering sum for the market to absorb when those execs cash...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Is The Boss Selling? | 5/4/1998 | See Source »

...Chen '01 said the weekend gave him a good picture of academic life here--but only because he visited a wide array of courses. "[Visiting classes] is the best way to go if you have the time." he said...

Author: By Renee J. Raphael, CONTRIBUTING WRITERS | Title: Student Advice to Pre-Frosh: Broaden Academic Horizons | 4/27/1998 | See Source »

...Khentov's neighborhood one routinely hears at least 10 different languages, and the casual passer-by will smell an array of ethnic foods including tacos, five varieties of noodles and maybe even a little gefilte fish. For Khentov, even the long return trip to Cambridge could not erase thoughts of such casual beauty, of his racially and ethnically diverse neighborhood...

Author: By Dafna V. Hochman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Urban Roots | 4/24/1998 | See Source »

...droves of students still huddle around the "Subjects Wanted and Colloquia" board in the lobby of WJH, eyes darting around sign-up sheets asking "Are you Caucasian?" or "Do you experience Panic Attacks?" The motivation for willingly agreeing to endure an array of mind-probing and often bizarre experiments is readily apparent. As one popular sign proclaims "Are You Interested in Quick...

Author: By Sonia Inamdar, | Title: Subjects Wanted | 4/23/1998 | See Source »

...beat that bogey, he concedes, he can't simply offer a wide array of financial products. Customers won't buy them purely on convenience. The failure of financial "supermarkets" at American Express and Sears proved that in the '80s and today the number of small community-oriented banks is growing in towns where mergers have wiped out local institutions, leaving corporate branches and higher fees in their wake. "You have to be a low-cost provider," Weill emphasizes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Making a Money Machine | 4/20/1998 | See Source »

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