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Word: reborning (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...performance of its products, such as Nivea creme, have helped its stock rise 13% in two weeks. COGNITEC: This tiny German tech company collapsed in the 1990s because there wasn't a market for its face-recognition technology. That's changed as terrorism has become a priority; the reborn firm recently won a test carried out by four U.S. agencies. L'OREAL: Even in difficult economic times, consumers still want to look fabulous. That's propelling the French cosmetics giant's sales - up 10.4% in the first three months of this year - despite American boycott calls. GENERALI: European insurers were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tale of The Tape | 4/6/2003 | See Source »

...Places have secondary importance to me—having so many friends in so many countries is the most important thing,” he says, sweeping his arm vaguely outward. “Soon, I will leave this country, too, to be reborn elsewhere...

Author: By Yingzhen Zhang, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Thai Activist Brings New Perspective to Harvard | 3/18/2003 | See Source »

Your editorial (“Bestowing An Undue Honor,” Nov. 21) was a compelling and sensible refutation of the reborn invitation to poet Tom Paulin. Claims that Paulin’s remarks, advocating violence and murder against Israelis, were misconstrued or taken out of context are unpersuasive. Let’s hear Paulin say, without ambiguity or wiggle-wobble, what he thinks should be done to bring peace to the Middle East...

Author: By Charles L. Geshekter, | Title: Time to Stop Vacillating | 11/22/2002 | See Source »

...this man, in his most flattering colonial Stetson, who is such a surprising likeness? Am I a pilgrim reborn or an out of work actor, forced to deny the outside world to visiting tourists...

Author: By Samuel A.S. Clark, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Jive-Ass Turkey | 11/21/2002 | See Source »

...those who want to "get it," the new visionaries are always ready to help. Rick Haythornthwaite, CEO of Britain's Invensys, an industrial giant reborn this spring as an energy and production management firm, read Natural Capitalism and invited Amory Lovins to speak at the company. To an audience of 400 managers, Lovins, a globetrotting consultant who makes his home at the Rocky Mountain Institute in Colorado, posed questions the group had never heard. How do spiders spin threads stronger than Kevlar but without factories? How might Exxon officials have cleaned up Alaska after the Valdez disaster if they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New War on Waste | 8/26/2002 | See Source »

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