Word: outputted
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Second, the administration should think about the returns from this sort of investment in broader terms. Investing in people is a good way to achieve higher productivity, especially at Harvard, where productivity is usually not measured by the output of plant and equipment but by the output of its citizens...
...environmental standards. What's more, it's a trade-off both candidates are willing to make. George Bush, for example, signed the Clean Air Act. He brags about it. For the sake of cleaner air, that law imposes on factories pollution standards that will raise expenses and reduce output -- and, inevitably, cost jobs...
...Island, already covering 2,200 acres and rising to a height of 155 ft., is rapidly filling up. And the city, which recycles only about 6% of its waste, must turn increasingly to recycling or incineration. A program launched in 1989 to recycle 25% of the city's daily output of 26,000 tons of solid waste has fallen short. Only 29 of the city's 59 community board districts participate in the program. Although Mayor David Dinkins hopes to expand this to 39 by the end of the year, officials admit that recycling faces heavy slogging. "Recycling began with...
Harvard is going to have to be come more selective in ordering books and periodicals. "Every year," De Gennaro explains, "we are paying more and more money to buy an ever-de-creasing percent age of the output of the world's publishers...
Green is already planning to spend a year or more on an intensive study of the economics of higher education. He plans to write a series of papers comparing universities and examining the output of higher education, rising tuitions, research and its funding, and financial...