Word: crunchingly
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...prediction that the stock slump would clip half a point off Britain's 3.0% projected growth rate next year. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher called for a healthy dose of budgetary realism in Washington, and Chancellor Lawson reminded tight-fisted central bankers in Bonn that it was a credit crunch that turned the 1929 Crash into the painful 1930s Depression. Said he, referring to West Germany's reluctance to stoke its economy: "It would certainly be helpful if the German monetary authorities were to show more awareness of this...
Students said that the new gym will hopefully allevaite some of the crunch on the B-School's current athletic facility, Carey Cage...
Owners of new businesses felt the pressure last week as well. Renee Ickson Young, 27, opened her own public relations firm in Manhattan last year. When she heard the news of last Monday's mayhem, she realized that she would have to adjust her business plan. "In a crunch," she says, "the extras are the first things to go at a company, and public relations is considered an extra." Until last week, Jo Ann Coogan, 30, of Dearborn, Mich., was planning to open a small brokerage. But her start-up money was heavily invested in the stock market...
Legislators in favor of the bill said the linkage clause will not resolve the entire child care problem, but will address the major crisis facing parents right now--the space crunch for daycare centers...
Although I am glad to see that you picked up the article on the GSAS housing crunch on the front page of the September 17, 1987 issue of The Crimson, I must take issue with Stephen Black's quote, "It shouldn't come as a surprise to any of them because they weren't promised housing. They knew the risk and there's not a damned thing the University can do about...