Word: employeers
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...produced a film from that place within the fiber of his being where his own passions lie. The public responded, providing a lesson for other people of faith. From Gibson we have learned that we should not be afraid, should not run from controversy and should be willing to employ a work ethic and invest the dollars necessary to compete in the marketplace of ideas. --By JERRY B. JENKINS, co-author of the Left Behind series of novels
...image of rain is a fair one to employ both in regard to the night and the band’s sound, downcast but with shining points of brilliance, tiny and unexpected chord changes when a song has seemed to have fallen into pattern. Clearlake’s songs are involving, engaging and perhaps the only adjective all-encompassing and vague enough to describe this sound of rock might just be “British...
...twist on the usual reports of U.S. jobs leaving the country, last week Infosys Technologies, India's second largest software maker, said it has begun "aggressive hiring in America" to employ 500 people over the next three years to work for a new U.S. subsidiary, Infosys Consulting. The jobs should make American politicians smile--until they find out that these employees will be advising companies on how to improve efficiency through outsourcing and moving work to India. --By David Bjerklie
...militant labor unions have increasingly driven the polishers to Surat, where wages for diamond cutters are lower, at $2,500-$3,500 a year, and workers are more pliable. In the past, Surat's diamond industry has been a hot spot of controversy, attracting accusations that some workshops employ children in sweatshop conditions. Many of Surat's diamond workshops are tiny family-run units, which makes it hard to gather reliable information about them. But recent studies suggest that the use of child labor, although not completely eradicated in Surat, is now miniscule and declining rapidly as the city...
Dozens of colleges and universities across the country employ a system of distributional requirements, whereby students must take a specified number of courses in designated academic areas. Yale, for example, which completed a curricular review in November 2003, will in the Fall require its students to take two courses in the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences and quantitative reasoning, as well as two writing-intensive courses...