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Word: forking (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...summer, the mine will close and the last 120 miners will lose their jobs. It will be the latest in a series of hard-luck hits for the area, which lost 30 or 40 businesses, its only hospital and the CSX railroad when the Black Fork River flooded in 1985. Another flood in early 1996 provided sufficient excuse for a shoe plant employing 135 to close down and move abroad. That makes a small charcoal plant with 150 workers the largest single employer in Tucker County, where many of the miners reside. Beyond that, most of the jobs are seasonal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MOUNT STORM, WEST VIRGINIA: COAL WAR | 7/7/1997 | See Source »

...Martin is a haunted man. What's put him on the couch of Alan Arkin's understandably nervous psychiatrist is lack of job satisfaction--killing the President of Paraguay with a fork just isn't the kick it might once have been--and the fact that he still pines for his high school sweetheart, whom he stood up without explanation on their long-ago prom night. Since she is played by the divine Minnie Driver--now working as a disk jockey but still smitten, it turns out, and still warily available--his feelings are understandable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: HIP YOUNG MAN WITH A GUN | 4/28/1997 | See Source »

...complex, which stems from HFS's quasi-consumer strategy. Despite owning the Days Inn and Howard Johnson nameplates, for example, "we are not in the hotel business," says Silverman. "Nor are we in the real estate business.'' The main clients of HFS are the thousands of franchisees who fork over royalties and fees in return for the right to use HFS brand names and receive support services ranging from national advertising campaigns to discounts on Coca-Cola, computers and televisions. The franchisees can even get help setting up employee-retirement plans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DEALMAKER HENRY SILVERMAN: HFS STANDS FOR GROWTH | 3/17/1997 | See Source »

...think there's anything unique about human intelligence," Gates says over dinner one night at a nearly deserted Indian restaurant in a strip mall near his office. Even while eating, he seems to be multitasking; ambidextrous, he switches his fork back and forth throughout the meal and uses whichever hand is free to gesture or scribble notes. "All the neurons in the brain that make up perceptions and emotions operate in a binary fashion," he explains. "We can someday replicate that on a machine." Earthly life is carbon based, he notes, and computers are silicon based, but that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: IN SEARCH OF THE REAL BILL GATES | 1/13/1997 | See Source »

...ambitious campaign platform: He hopes to renovate the MAC and to throw myriad comedy shows, rock concerts and tailgates on campus. He's betting students will fork over another $5 each year to pay for the social activities...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Aiming for an Impact | 12/9/1996 | See Source »

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