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  2. Citi Field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citi_Field

    Opening in 2009, Citi Field is the ballpark of Major League Baseball ’s New York Mets. The stadium was built as a replacement for the adjacent Shea Stadium, which had opened in 1964. Citi Field was designed by the company Populous. The $850 million baseball park was funded with $615 million in public subsidies, [ 10 ] including the sale of ...

  3. American Express - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Express

    Share of the American Express Company, 1865. In 1850, American Express was started as a freight forwarding company in Buffalo, New York. [13] It was founded as a joint-stock corporation by the merger of the cash-in-transit companies owned by Henry Wells (Wells & Company), William G. Fargo (Livingston, Fargo & Company), and John Warren Butterfield (Wells, Butterfield & Company, the successor ...

  4. Costco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Costco

    Costco membership card from Iceland. Costco's earliest predecessor, Price Club, opened its first store on July 12, 1976, on Morena Boulevard in San Diego, California.It was founded three months earlier by Sol Price and his son, Robert, following a dispute with the new owners of FedMart, Price's previous membership-only discount store. [14]

  5. Moreno Valley Boy Arrested For Alleged School Threats

    patch.com/california/banning-beaumont/moreno...

    MORENO VALLEY, CA — A 12-year-old boy was arrested at his Moreno Valley home Wednesday after investigators allege he made threats against students at his Jurupa Valley elementary school.

  6. Technological unemployment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technological_unemployment

    Prof. Mark MacCarthy (2014) The general consensus that innovation does not cause long-term unemployment held strong for the first decade of the 21st century although it continued to be challenged by a number of academic works, and by popular works such as Marshall Brain's Robotic Nation and Martin Ford's The Lights in the Tunnel: Automation, Accelerating Technology and the Economy of the ...

  7. Joseph Stiglitz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Stiglitz

    Studies in the theory of growth and income distribution (1967) Joseph Eugene Stiglitz (/ ˈstɪɡlɪts /; born February 9, 1943) is an American New Keynesian economist, [2] a public policy analyst, political activist, and a professor at Columbia University. He is a recipient of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2001) [3] and the ...

  8. Asunción - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asunción

    Asunción (English: / ɑː ˌ s uː n s i ˈ oʊ n, ˌ ɑː s uː n ˈ s j oʊ n /, [3] [4] [5] Spanish:) is the capital and the largest city of Paraguay.The city stands on the eastern bank of the Paraguay River, almost at the confluence of this river with the Pilcomayo River.

  9. Prime number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prime_number

    A prime number (or a prime) is a natural number greater than 1 that is not a product of two smaller natural numbers. A natural number greater than 1 that is not prime is called a composite number. For example, 5 is prime because the only ways of writing it as a product, 1 × 5 or 5 × 1, involve 5 itself. However, 4 is composite because it is a ...