Word: household
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Dumping has also been valuable for Tennessee's Bouldin Corp. In 2003 the firm began taking Warren County garbage and converting it to what Bouldin calls "fluff." That's household trash ground up, with the metals removed, and heated so it's inert. Fluff is used as a peat substitute. Bouldin's new landfill project is expected to swing to profitability after it launches its first durable products next year: landscape timber and building blocks made from trash. "A few years down the line, we'll wonder why we ever put this stuff in the ground," says marketing manager Terry...
DIED. Ralph Story, 86, TV and radio personality known for his wry on-air manner; in Santa Ynez, Calif. Born Ralph Snyder, the World War II fighter pilot became a household name as M.C. of TV's The $64,000 Challenge in the 1950s. Later he told quirky stories in a then rare casual style on Ralph Story's Los Angeles, an Emmy-winning series that examined life in the city and aired for six years...
...person having power over another. I think that's been true in all my plays. After Abu Ghraib happened, I wanted to pose the question: how do good and decent people do terrible deeds? I have a profound hunger to understand that, especially having grown up in a household where I had this very attractive, successful father who was incredibly violent...
...this very remote outpost, the middle of nowhere really, in a tent.”Abdalla’s son was the head of the Janjaweed, funded by the government in the recent conflict, de Waal says.“I was living in their household where the leaders of the Janjaweed were being, at that time, schooled,” de Waal recalls.After completing his thesis, de Waal returned to Sudan multiple times.In 1989, the night before he was to start working as an analyst for Human Rights Watch, the Sudanese government fell and no human rights activist...
Immigrants working household jobs, rather than shrinking the job market for native laborers, actually do them a favor by increasing wages and reducing inequalities in pay, a recent Kennedy School of Government study found. The working paper, entitled “The Globalization of Household Production,” was co-authored by Gates Professor of Developing Societies Michael R. Kremer and Stanley Watt, who recently received his PhD in economics at Harvard. Employment of certain types of immigrants—namely, women who serve as household laborers—can free up native skilled workers to contribute positively...