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Word: ohio (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

Harvard honorees include Cloud, from Little Rock, Arkansas; Alison Morantz '93, from Kansas City, Missouri; Stephen L. Morgan '93, from Shaker Heights, Ohio; Raimondo, from Greenville, Rhode Island; Faith C. Salie '93, from Atlanta, Georgia; and Janice R. Ugaki, a Harvard law student from Blackfoot, Idaho...

Author: By Jessica C. Schell, CONTRIBUTING REPORTER | Title: Six Harvard Students Win Rhodes | 12/7/1992 | See Source »

...scene was repeated from Texas to Ohio and Maryland as the freak storms, caused by a southerly dip in the jet stream that slammed cold Canadian air against warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico, zigzagged across the Southeast. High winds tossed a school bus full of children off a road in North Carolina (five kids and the driver were admitted to a hospital) and tore the steeple from a Georgia church as the congregation sang Amazing Grace. Still, in Florence, Mississippi, fate smiled on a six-day-old girl, ripped from her father's arms when a twister...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Vortex Of Misery | 12/7/1992 | See Source »

NCAA Poll 1. Maine (25) 9-0-1 250 2. Lake Sup St. 6-1-2 216 3. Michigan 7-2-2 203 4. Miami, Ohio 9-2-1 143 5. HARVARD 5-1-1 137 6. Denver 7-2-1 126 7. Minn.-Duluth 5-3-0 79 8. Wisconsin 7-4-1 59 9. St. Lawrence 6-1-1 48 10. Minnesota...

Author: By Y. TAREK Farouki, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: MEN'S HOCKEY NOTEBOOK | 12/2/1992 | See Source »

...main reason that Clinton's idea will not work is that foreign companies like Honda, which invested in auto and motorcycle plants in Ohio in the 1980s and helped create thousands of new U.S. jobs, have little motivation to move their profits elsewhere. Germany's corporate tax rate is 51% and Japan's is 46%, while the rate in the U.S. is only 34%. "There's just not much incentive for these companies to move their profits to higher-tax countries," says Hufbauer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Foreigner-Tax Folly | 11/30/1992 | See Source »

...this new global economy, Reich writes, it matters little whether a company is based in London or Los Angeles. A Honda built in Ohio may have more "domestic content" than an Oldsmobile. The only policy that will benefit all Americans, Reich writes, is for Washington to "invest" in the two assets that won't leave the country: "human capital," such as education and job training; and physical infrastructure, from roads and bridges to high-speed railroads and fiber-optic communications. Such public investments, Reich argues, will encourage both U.S. and foreign firms to create jobs in America. How would Reich...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Clinton's People: Robert Reich | 11/23/1992 | See Source »

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