Word: cushion
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Bill Morrison's fast-break slamdunk and Eric William's 20-ft. jumper at the buzzer gave the home squad its sevenpoint cushion as the clubs broke for the lockerroom...
...collecting rare first editions and traveling. He thought of himself as a private man of letters, a scholar-prince supported by stipends from his family. Unfortunately his father's money was not always enough. Parental disagreements and later Germany's ruinous inflation burst Benjamin's financial cushion and forced him to live by his pen. He put the problem of freelancing succinctly when he wrote, "There are places in which I can earn a minimum and places in which I can live on a minimum, but there is no place where I can do both...
Since 1974 many unions have been winning annual pay increases of 9%, 10% and sometimes more, to cushion members against inflation. Because the raises typically have been built into three-year contracts, employers have to pay the large annual increases even when the inflation rate goes down; since 1975, union wages have tended to go up faster than the inflation rate. Meanwhile, nonunion workers have begun to expect similar-sized raises, and companies pay them-often simply to keep skilled employees from quitting. Since productivity has not come near staying even with the growth of the paychecks-output per hour...
Cornell had a chance to pull off the victory as it entered the final period trailing 9-7, but tallies by Jim Bidne and Mike O'Neill gave Hopkins a four-goal cushion that allowed them to coast home to victory...
There are exceptions. Political Writer Richard Reeves earns more than $100,000 a year, Diplomatic Expert Tad Szulc makes about $80,000, and Sportswriter Bil Gilbert grosses more than $40,000. But the big moneymakers almost always have some kind of cushion. Reeves has, among other odd jobs, a regular Esquire column that guarantees him $50,000 a year; Szulc does books (twelve to date) as well as magazine work; Gilbert has a contract with SPORTS ILLUSTRATED that places a solid floor under his yearly income. Such props are essential. Says Literary Agent Scott Meredith: "There are no writers left...