Word: employments
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That gave me food for thought. Just that morning I'd gotten an exceedingly fashionable 'do at Diego's, a commendable salon in The Loft on JFK Street, and I decided to employ the experience as an educational tool for my friend and those who, like him, have a devil-may-care approach to their coifs...
Murphy said last spring that he decides what bus companies to employ for reunions and and how to organize their schedules. He also said he believes his ties do not present a conflict of interest...
Legal immigrants are the constant scapegoats of short-sighted, racist, and generally hateful politicians. They are seen as unemployable swallowers of social services--worse than their illegal counterparts who do not rely on such programs. This image is completely fallacious. Legal immigrants are very likely to be self-employed, and often start businesses that employ others and contribute to GDP. They do not consume national social services disproportionately or contribute to the "free-rider" problem in the welfare system...
Subsidize the health-care premiums of small businesses that employ low- income workers. While big companies that save on health insurance are expected to create new jobs, internal White House studies predict that those gains would be more than offset by jobs lost among low-wage workers at small businesses. Many of these businesses do not now pay anything to insure their workers, and would be required to pay at least 3.5% of payroll under the Clinton plan -- a payment some could finance only by shedding workers. President Clinton recently approved new transitional subsidies for businesses with fewer than...
...constitutional challenge to Nunn's policy will employ either the First Amendment's free-speech guarantees or the Fifth and 14th Amendments' support of equal protection under the law. The government is already prepared to defend its policy against Clinton's old allies in the gay civil rights movement. In a memorandum to the President early last week that defended the new regulations as constitutional, Janet Reno wrote that First Amendment challenges by gays would probably be rejected by the courts because "the policy is not directed at speech or expression itself," but, presumably, at the habits the speech suggested...