Word: fe
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...light of 2004 and tried to divine whether Gore's words were just the opening salvo of a campaign to make Bush foreign policy Topic A. They got no help from Gore: when he came onstage the following day at a rally for Democratic candidates in Santa Fe, N.M., he was greeted by hand-lettered placards congratulating him and chants of "Say no to war!" But Gore never directly mentioned Iraq in his comments, offering instead his well-worn litany of jokes about the indignities of being a former Vice President ("Now I gotta take my shoes...
...senior vice president for research; Sandeep Malhotra, vice president for nanotechnology at Ardesta, an Ann Arbor, Mich., venture-capital firm and industry incubator; Chris Meyer, director of Cap Gemini Ernst & Young's Center for Business Innovation in Cambridge, Mass.; and Melanie Mitchell, a research professor at the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico. They offer a glimpse of technologies--most of them already in use--that will reshape the way businesses are run and profits are made in the years ahead...
...aground on San Cristobal in January 2001, scientists thought that the Galapagos Islands' wildlife had had a lucky escape. But researchers now believe that marine iguanas, which are unique to the islands, are particularly vulnerable to pollution and that 62% of the population on the island of Santa Fe died after 644 cu m of fuel spilled from the disabled ship into the sea. U.S. Traffic Highlighted A survey of 89 countries by the U.S. government showed that at least 700,000 and perhaps as many as 4 million people are abused in a "modern form of slavery." Secretary...
...that two decades ago he sexually assaulted a 30-year-old graduate student. (The Vatican accepted his resignation a day after the revelation.) Add the Weakland settlement to the huge sums other dioceses have paid to cover sex-abuse claims in recent years: an estimated $25 million in Santa Fe, N.M.; nearly $30 million in Boston; and $31 million in Dallas...
...1980s, when only a few victims had gone public with claims of abuse, church officials could afford to resolve each case quietly and relatively inexpensively. But in the following decade, facing the prospect of multimillion-dollar judgments in sex-abuse cases, the dioceses in Dallas and Santa Fe were forced to sell or mortgage property to stay afloat. Since then, church officials have scrambled to devise new lines of defense...