• The chief executive doesn't hide the airline's penchant for being different.

    WSJ: Managing in Asia: A Focus on People Keeps Little Guy Flying High

  • The medical executive doesn't own a bicycle because it's a hassle to haul one downstairs, find a place to lock it up on the street and worry about it, he said.

    WSJ: NYC launches bike share program, largest in nation

  • Stuart Rose, the Arcadia executive who approved the deal, doesn't question the fairness of Green's buyout offer, but notes that not all of Green's turnarounds come from better efficiencies.

    FORBES: Billionaires

  • The SEC's complaint doesn't name the executive of Philadelphia Consolidated, though he is said to have met Mr. McGee at Alcoholics Anonymous in 1999.

    WSJ: SEC Alleges Insider Ring Stemmed From AA Meeting

  • Probably the only chief executive who doesn't need to be kept away from sharp objects was J.

    WSJ: Debbie Downers on Wall Street

  • His unwillingness to sell will cost shareholders dearly in the short-term, and there's good chance they'll push for his ouster as chief executive if the stock doesn't stage a comeback soon.

    FORBES: Jerry Yang's $500 Million Bet

  • Or as an economist might put it, if there are positive externalities generated by a business (good things for the wider economy for which the company doesn't receive direct financial payment), the chief executive is already being amply rewarded for them by a surplus element in his or her pay.

    BBC: Do business leaders deserve their gongs?

  • ExxonMobil Chairman and Chief Executive Lee Raymond says the company doesn't tolerate corruption in any of its operations, and he's probably right.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • "There is this misguided view that the UN system doesn't work, " said Martin Khor, executive director of the South Centre, an intergovernmental organisation of developing countries.

    BBC: UN picks new climate change chief

  • For those who expressed concerns about giving the federal government too much discretionary power through waivers and exceptions in applying different aspects of the law, we have a chance to make clear exactly how the executive branch must enforce this immigration law and what the consequences are if it doesn't.

    WSJ: Marco Rubio: The Immigration Reform Opportunity

  • As founder and chairman of Henderson Land, one of Hong Kong's largest real estate firms (the company doesn't have a chief executive), 70-year-old Lee owns some 64%of the company, or 1.1 billion shares.

    FORBES: Capitalism is contagious

  • Michael Weiner, executive director of the MLB Players Association, said he doesn't believe any collusive behavior is taking place.

    WSJ: Baseball Free Agency Dies of Neglect -- Matt Cain, Joey Votto, Andrew McCutchen, Matt Kemp Opt for Long-Term Deals

  • But flat sandals are nothing but bad news, says Bob Thompson, executive director for the Institute for Preventive Foot Health, who doesn't own a single pair.

    CNN: Flip-flops present feet with a painful problem

  • However, NRA chief executive Wayne LaPierre told the panel that the current background check system doesn't work, so expanding it would only create an unmanageable government bureaucracy instead of reducing gun crime.

    CNN: Obama still backs new gun ban; top senator less certain

  • One month doesn't make a trend, of course, but the executive editor of Kelley Blue Book, a vehicle information guide for consumers, thinks buyers' attitudes are changing.

    FORBES: High Gas Prices Are Here To Stay

  • President Bush is willing to impose his version of airport security by executive order if Congress doesn't pass a bill that allows the federal government to contract with private companies to provide airport and baggage security, a key House GOP ally of the Bush White House told CNN.

    CNN: Recovery: Aviation security debate continues

  • He doesn't expect any dramatic shift this weekend, with the party executive's motion most likely to be adopted.

    BBC: Abortion on Sinn Fein conference agenda

  • Yet the organisation seems to have a surprising gap in its own knowledge - it has told the Information Commissioner that it doesn't hold any information on what its chief executive is paid.

    BBC: The group which doesn't know its chief executive's pay

  • Example: A senior female executive with a first-rate resume and a fat pension doesn't have the husband and children she once hoped for.

    CNN: Career - Review: Career encounters with 'the third shift'

  • Matthew Weiner, the creator and driving force of the AMC cable series "Mad Men, " doesn't outwardly resemble the show's main character, the unflappable advertising executive Don Draper.

    WSJ: It's His Mad, Mad World | Mad Men | A Cultural Conversation With Matthew Weiner | By David Mermelstein

  • So, for example, just because a business calls an executive benefit a stock option or a severance pay plan doesn't necessarily remove the plan from the sweep of the law.

    FORBES

  • While Dowd agrees an investigation is in order, he doesn't think Senator Mitchell, who currently holds an executive position with the Boston Red Sox, should be the person leading it.

    NPR: Major League Baseball to Investigate Steroid Use

  • "There's been a rush to small cars, but that doesn't necessarily mean the shift is permanent, " said Jeremy Anwyl, chief executive of Edmunds.com, which tracks consumer interest by measuring its Web site traffic to each vehicle segment.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • But Nokia could have difficulties poaching people from Apple and Google, said Jeff Leopold, a managing director at executive-search firm Cook Associates Inc. in Boston, because it doesn't carry the same status in Silicon Valley.

    WSJ: Nokia Considers Adopting Microsoft Phone Platforms

  • "There are those of us who genuinely love these things and see something in them that a lot of people don't see, but it doesn't really convert to a commercial reality, " says Donald Kelly, the former executive director of the Rothschild Petersen Patent Model Museum, who now runs Intellectual Asset Management Associates, a Washington, D.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • StephenWaldisStephen Waldis, Synchronoss' chief executive, said just as much Tuesday during the company's conference call and he added that he doesn't see it stopping.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Merck Chief Executive Raymond Gilmartin has firmly said that he doesn't want to buy anyone--that the company's salvation will come from its own labs.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Stephen Waldis , Synchronoss' chief executive, said just as much Tuesday during the company's conference call and he added that he doesn't see it stopping.

    FORBES: Synchromissity

  • Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, said his group will be watching carefully to ensure that Intel doesn't do anything with its chips that could betray users' privacy, such as linking their identities to particular devices in a way that could be seen by others.

    WSJ: Intel Bets Its Chips on McAfee

  • With less food being grown, people are starting to sell their personal belongings and livestock so they get by in the coming weeks -- but that doesn't take care of their needs long-term, said UNICEF Executive Director Tony Lake, who spoke to CNN on a dry plain in Banda, south of Chad's capital, Ndjamena.

    CNN: STORY HIGHLIGHTS

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