Word: expanded
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...business sector has many issues like expansion and taxes that can be addressed by the city government,” Campion said. “These are mutually dependent worlds.” Abramson discussed the recent challenge of relocating 4,000 residents of his city in order to expand the Louisville International Airport and create 23,000 new jobs. “You have to see past immediate problems and look at bold long-term investments. You have to think about the economic potential of your city,” he said. Shaheen said she received positive feedback from...
...everything in the solar market is poised to explode: capacity, sales and competition. Michael Rogol, a solar analyst with the brokerage CLSA, says solar sales will expand from about $12 billion this year to $40 billion in 2010. There are hundreds of start-ups that, like Energy Innovations, have yet to make a dime. "If they can get their costs down, they have a very promising commercial appeal. But that's a very big if," he says...
...about the disparities,” Emmons said. “We don’t know a lot about how to reduce them.” The first step will be to develop a common strategy. According to Glazer, the team will use the $4.3 million to expand and develop medical training programs for minority students, support research, and promote community outreach. Kennedy, Emmons, and Glazer said they all view the pairing of the DF/HCC and UMass-Boston as an important first step in eliminating inequalities across the spectrum of health care and education. “UMASS brings...
...from HIV to AIDS, can transform HIV/AIDS into a manageable, chronic illness. And in the last few years, price reductions for anti-retroviral drugs in the developing world have made it possible to treat a patient for less than $140 per year. More than ever, it is possible to expand access to this life-saving therapy to each of the 6 million patients who currently need it. It is incumbent upon governments of both developed and developing countries to devote the resources necessary...
Candidates for Undergraduate Council (UC) president and vice-president have been subject to Harvard’s own version of campaign finance reform this year. In the hope of making the race fairer, reforms enacted last year by the UC expand and equalize the spending ability of each ticket. Under the new guidelines, each pair of running mates receives $400 from the UC budget to finance their campaign, a significant jump from the $100 available last year. This swelling of campaign war chests has improved the quality of this year’s race by allowing candidates to focus...