Word: atlantas
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...during his bid for the 1976 G.O.P. presidential nomination, made the covers of TIME, PEOPLE and Newsweek after the Gipper's death last year and whose work for TIME covering Reagan's triumphant 1980 campaign inspired the President to hire him as White House photographer; of cancer; in Atlanta...
...Labor Department reported 215,000 new jobs in November. "There is a huge disconnect between the headlines and reality," says economist Ed Yardeni at Oak Associates, an investment firm. "It's a prosperous world." But in the consumer's mind, nothing trumps job security. Reuben Kuruvila, 26, of Atlanta, plans to spring a fur coat on his wife. "I really can't tell what the economy will do," he says, but adds that he expects a decent raise after completing management training at the hotel company where he works...
...positive territory for the year and is within striking distance of its all-time high of 11,723. Fueling the rise: companies are flush with profits, buying back shares and raising dividends. "I don't factor it into decisions like shopping," says Scott Fuselier, 32, a sales manager in Atlanta, of his rising 401(k) balance. "It's so long-term." Yet that is measurable wealth for the half of the population that owns stocks. Confident in his net worth and prospects, Fuselier is renovating two rooms in his home for Christmas...
...feared the political ramifications of opening the borders to a flood of Haitians, especially after a number of them tested HIV-positive. After a lower court initially blocked him from sending the refugees back, Bush held them at Guantánamo. In the meantime, the federal appellate court in Atlanta ruled that the Haitians had no protection under American law because, at Guantánamo, they were outside the U.S. At the naval base, Immigration and Naturalization Service officials classified many of the escapees as “economic,” not “political...
...filed suit against the U.S. in a Brooklyn federal district court. He argued that the Haitians had a right to counsel and that the government was illegally denying him access to his clients. The Justice Department struck back with the same argument that had convinced the Atlanta appeals court...