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NYT


Applying for schools, especially graduate schools, can be a stressful experience for all of those involved. Above is my stance on ways to avoid getting on the dreaded wait list. 

Read the whole thing here.

10:00 am, by jerriann
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tagged: cff, ucf news, grad school, nyt,




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Read the article here.

9:45 am, by jerriann
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tagged: bp oil spill, nyt,




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DANGERPANTS!: Somewhere, somehow, things went haywire.

delgrosso:

We can go to war in Iraq and Afghanistan, and threaten to blow Iran off the face of the planet. We can conduct a nonstop campaign of drone and helicopter attacks in Pakistan and run a network of secret prisons around the world. We are the mightiest nation mankind has ever seen.
But we can’t seem…




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Forgive an old newspaper hack a moment of sentimentality, but it is somehow reassuring that a newspaper still has traction in an environment preoccupied by social media. It makes sense when you think about it: newspapers convey a sense of place, of actually being there, that digital media can’t. When is the last time somebody handed you a Web site?





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NYT: You’re Business Savvy

You are interested in a range of thoughts and opinions, not limiting yourself to what people consider to be the norms. Constantly on the lookout for fresh ideas, you are great at seeing things from different angles, which is what gives you such great business acumen. There’s a strong, thoughtful element to your character that means you love anything with a sense of intrigue to really get your heart racing.

You’re not one to let a challenge pass you by and your thirst to close the next big deal is what makes you tick. You’re straightforward, self-disciplined, thoughtful and hard working. Once established in a post, you are very difficult to unseat. You’re not just an idea-oriented individual, but also an achiever. Rarely do you get ahead through advantage or nepotism, as you are more likely to come out of nowhere with unusual talents and take the field by storm. When called upon in a time of crisis, you often come up with highly creative and practical solutions, winning the appreciation of your superiors. Above all, you’re very realistic about the positions you hold and shrewd enough to guarantee survival in the job market. Keep up with the latest in business on nytimes.com, must-reads for you are DealBook, Media Decoder or You’re the Boss.

Take the New York Times quiz here.

9:55 am, by jerriann
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tagged: NYT, quiz, news,




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NYT: Anne Frank, a Mormon?

Republicans are the ones who have made faith part of the presidential test. Now we’ll see if Mitt can pass it.”





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Why Not Occupy Newsrooms?

But Gannett is not the only big media enterprise where the consequences of bad decisions land on everyone except those who made them. The Tribune Company, a chain of newspapers and television stations run into the ground by Sam Zell after he bought it in 2007, is paying out tens of millions of dollars in bonuses as part of a deal in which it would exit bankruptcy.

Over 4,000 people in the company lost their jobs, and the journalistic missions of formerly robust newspapers it operates — including The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune and The Baltimore Sun — have been curtailed. And even though Randy Michaels and some of his corporate fraternity brothers who operated the company into bankruptcy are gone, more than 600 managers who were there while the company cratered remain.

Not only do they have jobs while so many others were sent packing, but the remaining leadership will be eligible for a bonus pool from $26.4 million to $32.4 million under the current plan.

Through the magic of blunt force cost-cutting — about $800 million over the last three years, much of it in the form of layoffs — a lawyer for the senior creditors told the judge in charge of the bankruptcy case that the bankrupt enterprise would generate an estimated $517 million in cash flow for 2011.

Over the past three years, counting the payment scheduled for 2011, the bonuses could amount to $115 million, according to The Chicago Tribune. The drawn-out legal process hasn’t stopped lawyers and the current managers from picking the carcass clean. The Tribune story includes overleveraged purchases, feckless management and a culture of personal enrichment, all hallmarks of the Wall Street way that have left protesters enraged.





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