Word: uncertainity
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
While line workers at the nine GM plants scheduled to shut down ponder their uncertain future, the mood at Honda's two assembly plants in Ohio is full of hope. The Japanese company is in expansion mode in the U.S., with the Ohio plants and a third in Alabama ramping up production. Honda is spending $123 million to replace the paint shop at the Marysville, Ohio, plant and another $89 million to expand its nearby parts-distribution center. The East Liberty plant recently launched the stylish new Honda Civic, which last week was named Motor Trend...
...Cambridge gears up for its City Council elections tomorrow, political hopefuls across the city are making a final push to woo uncertain voters. Although the council is known for its low turnover, none of this year’s incumbents are resting on their laurels.In an election with all nine incumbents hoping to renew their terms and several challengers pushing for council seats, electoral success is far from guaranteed, even for the most seasoned of politicos.This past weekend, The Crimson followed three of this year’s council incumbents—Kennedy School of Government (KSG) student and current...
...some girls to break away from the group, leaving others in the dust. So the whispering may stem from the very uncertainty of how the girls should act. And even if their goals are clear, whispering is a nervous impulse and a way to establish security in an uncertain situation. In fact, the girls probably can’t even hear what the others are saying...
...creative forces could imagine (as proved by this week’s episode, which centers around the sticky subject of abortion). All this ambivalence troubles me, because for the first time in seven seasons, the future of “The West Wing” seems genuinely uncertain. Gone are the old music and lighting cues that would tell you to go ahead and root for Bartlet because, not only is he the better man, but he’s going to win, too. As each new episode brings us closer to “election...
...working with him for over a year," says Stein, "it was very clear that in engaging cases he wouldn't start with the result and work his way backwards. He was always extremely methodical and reflective. He looked at the question; he researched by himself areas he was uncertain about. He sat and he thought a good deal about the arguments made by both sides, then he came to a tentative conclusion that he would perhaps probe a bit in oral arguments. And I think that's exactly what you want from a judge-someone who hasn't made...