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Trujillo
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Trujillo

City in northwestern Peru, with its port at Salaverry, capital of the department of La Libertad; population (2005) 644,500. Industries include engineering, copper, sugar milling, vehicle assembly and trade in agricultural produce.

Trujillo

Capital of the state of the same name in western Venezuela, 390 km/242 mi southwest of Caracas; population (1996) 32,683. The town stands at an altitude of 810 m/2,657 ft on the Pan-American Highway. The city is historically important – Simón Bolívar lived here for a while – but is of less commercial significance than the nearby town of Valera.

Trujillo

State in western Venezuela, chiefly in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada de Mérida, but with a small low-lying area to the west, bordering on Lake Maracaibo; area 7,426 sq km/2,867 sq mi; population (1996) 493,912. The capital is the city of Trujillo. Trujillo is a predominantly agricultural area producing coffee, cocoa, sugar, maize, and tobacco. Part of the Lake Maracaibo petroleum area is in the state.



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Attending the bride as her matrons of honor were Elizabeth Blankenship Benton of Madison and Eani Venable Truxillo of Brandon.
Recruiters also hope that potential applicants will see the firm and its procedures as fair (Gilland and Steiner, 2001; Truxillo, Bauer, Campion, and Paronto, 2002).
Since this hallmark study, tolerance for ambiguity has been associated with numerous markers of success, including objective and subjective supervisory ratings in selection of employees for hiring (Bauer & Truxillo, 2000) and positive attitudes toward risk (Johanson, 2000; Lauriola & Levin, 2001).
 
 
 
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