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Arundi Venkayya Cox is business editor at the Dayton Daily News. She graduated from Fairborn High School and Miami University in Oxford. She is a member of the Dayton Mother of Twins Club and is on the board of the Dayton Visual Arts Center.

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Remember sitting in algebra and physics classes and wondering when you would ever use those lessons “in the real world?”
Today, educators and business people around the region are working to answer those questions for students through the Dayton Regional STEM Center, which was created about two and a half years ago with a grant from the National Governors’ Association and additional support from the Montgomery County Educational Service Center and partners.
We reported much good business news in the region last week.
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base will add 200 jobs by mid-2011 as part of a new acquisition program called the Installation Acquisition Transformation Enterprise Sourcing Group.
The Dayton region has been the test market for many inventions.
Now, the community has the opportunity to be the proving ground for an ultra-high speed network.
Business owners looking for high-level temporary help have a new option — the time shared executive.
Two local small businesses are using the economic downturn to their advantage — and offering lessons that other companies can learn from.
Where will you be growing your business?
Some local companies are growing by expanding internationally.
John Griffith went to a seminar at Sinclair Community College several months ago to learn about Project HIRE (Hometown Investment in Regional Economies) and walked away with a way to hire four new employees.
Ron Muzechuk, franchise owner of ProForma CNR Marketing, had a big 2009.
Unusual to hear in this economy, I know.
It’s nice to know that there are businesses that still take risks despite the recession.
It’s a calculated risk — extremely calculated — but this week, Faruki, Ireland & Cox announced it will open an office in downtown Cincinnati.
A lack of opportunity and mentoring keep women from becoming business leaders, said Barbara Johnson, vice president for operations at Miami Valley Hospital.
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