Word: fastest
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Freshman winger Nick Hotchkin, one of the fastest Crimson booters, beat Sarnacki to a Catliff pass about 16 yards out on the left side of the penalty area, and he slid a low shot past the UMass netminder into the right side of the goal...
...state's best interests, has had himself an uphill fight. New Hampshire's economy screamed in the midst of the 1982 recession, with unemployment among the nation's highest at 9.2 percent. New, at a time when the most effective political rallying cry is "me!", New Hampshire boasts the fastest growing economy east of the Mississippi, Unemployment is at 3 percent. That's the national...
Computer experts have long warned that today's fastest machines can be used as formidable weapons for international sabotage. By programming a high-speed computer to dial every phone number in Japan, for instance, one could eventually reach telephone lines that tap directly into the Bank of Japan. Any disruption of the bank's computerized funds-transfer system risks wreaking havoc with the Japanese economy...
...floors are also given over to what officials call the K-School's fastest growing component, the Executive Research Programs...
Long gone is the cozy world in which CAB-regulated carriers were an exclusive and protected club. Since Congress passed the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, the number of interstate airlines has increased from 36 to 125. They range from no-frills discounters like People Express, the fastest-growing company in aviation history, to tiny Regent Air, which plies its passengers on flights from Los Angeles to Newark with caviar, lobster and French champagne. Not all of them have been profitable. Old and new carriers, including Braniff and Air Florida, went bankrupt by expanding routes too fast. Said Daryl Wyckoff...