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Through the years, they have grappled with problems of gender, race and even income when sizing up their staff.
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Mr. Bell was credited with reviving sales at the European unit, which has grappled with problems ranging from mad cow disease to angry French farmers.
Managers are ignorant of how much they spend in each area.The few firms that have grappled with these problems have made dramatic savings.
In Arizona, where hospitals have grappled with similar problems, the University Medical Center in Tucson wrote off more than $3 million in costs between July 2000 and June 2001 that it incurred from treating uninsured immigrants, said John Duval, chief operating officer for the center.
An extensive introduction, biographical sketches of each figure, and guides to further reading make this work a rich resource for anyone interested in India and the ways its leading political minds have grappled with the problems that have increasingly come to define the modern world.
Cities across America have grappled with similar problems.
Federal regulators have grappled with the problem of salmonella in eggs since it first emerged in the 1980s.
Among those leaving are its marketing and technology chiefs.Like Nortel, many firms have grappled with the problem of creating the right relationship between the centre and the periphery.
Others have grappled with this problem: how do you tell the story of the Holocaust in a way that encompasses both its vast geopolitical and its intimately personal dimensions?
And if the support is withdrawn, how will the economy cope?As investors have grappled with this problem, there have been days when a bunch of assets known as the "risk trade" (equities, commodities, the Australian dollar) have gone up, and other days when risk-averse investors have bought a separate basket including government bonds and the American dollar.
Although many of the commentators who have grappled with the problem of reconciling or explaining the differences in the language of §§ 563(12), 629(16), and 1979 argue, largely on the basis of their view of judicial policy, that the plain language of § 629(16) should be ignored in favor of the apparently broader sweep of § 1979, they do not seriously contend that the two may differ in scope.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com