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Business relocation Business relocation
relocation center in U.S. history, camp in which Japanese and Japanese-Americans were interned during World War II. Fearing a Japanese invasion, the military leaders, under authority of an executive order, defined (Mar., 1942) an area on the West Coast from which all persons of Japanese ancestry... Read more
Most Most
Most , Ger. Brüx, city (1991 pop. 70,670), NW Czech Republic, in Bohemia, near the German border. It is a railway junction and industrial city in a lignite-mining area. Chemicals, steel, and ceramics are the major products of Most. The city, whose history dates at least to the 11th cent., has... Read more
Butte (city) Butte (city)
Butte , city (1990 pop. 33,336), seat of Silver Bow co., SW Mont.; inc. 1879. It is a trade, ranching, and industrial center. Mining dominated the city's life and economy from its establishment in 1862. Copper, as well as zinc, silver, manganese, gold, lead, molybdenum, and arsenic have been... Read more
Relocation Relocation
Relocation Businesses move for the same reason that families do: they outgrow their quarters or shrink in size; they need to follow those who provide their income; they perceive new opportunities—and sometimes because they just decide to do it for altogether other reasons: a change in scene,... Read more
Rust Belt Rust Belt
Rust Belt or Rustbelt, economic region in the NE quadrant of the United States, focused on the Midwestern (see Midwest ) states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Ohio, as well as Pennsylvania. The term gained wide use in the 1970s as the formerly dominant industrial region became noted for... Read more
Amchitka Amchitka
Amchitka , island, 40 mi (64 km) long, in the Rat group of the Aleutian Islands, W Alaska. It was a site in 1965 and 1971 for the underground detonation of nuclear devices, its small population having been relocated. In the 1990s, radiation from the test caves was detected at the surface.... Read more
Chiricahua Chiricahua
Chiricahua ETHNONYM: Aiaho The Chiricahua are an Athapaskan-speaking American Indian group whose traditional homeland was located in present-day southeastern Arizona, southern New Mexico, southwestern Texas, and the adjacent areas of northern Mexico. At the beginning of the nineteenth century... Read more
Ivy League Ivy League
IVY LEAGUE IVY LEAGUE was coined in 1937 by a newspaper columnist to describe football competition at ivy-covered northeastern universities. The term came to identify eight prestigious private American universities that admit less than 20 percent of their applicants and require an academically... Read more
Lak Lak
Lak ETHNONYMS: Butam, Guramalum, Laget, Lambel, Pugusch, Siar, Siarra Orientation Identification. Lak is the name of a coastal Papua New Guinea population and encompasses two groups that are no longer distinct: inland dwellers who relocated to the coast at the time of Western contact... Read more
The Prudential Insurance Company of America The Prudential Insurance Company of America
The Prudential Insurance Company of America 751 Broad StreetPrudential PlazaNewark, New Jersey 07102U.S.A.(201) 802-6000Fax: (201) 802-3128 Mutual CompanyIncorporated: 1875 as Widows and Orphans Friendly SocietyEmployees: 105,000Assets: $163.97 billion The Prudential Insurance Company of... Read more

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