Word: grosse
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Steven A. Gross '87, also of Quincy House, begs to differ on this matter of personal taste. "Good food entails risk," Gross says. "The tabouli risks and satisfies. I don't know what else one can say about the tabouli...
Congratulations on Ariela J. Gross' commentary, "Feminism's Rebirth" (February 27). It is well-taken, and well-timed. While the stereotypes of feminism may have gained prominence recently, most of us can still claim to understand the substance of the fight. But we need to demonstrate that understanding...
Experts agree that a falling currency, like a rising one, offers both opportunities and perils. By making American companies more competitive with foreign rivals, it should help shrink the U.S. trade deficit, which hit a record $148.5 billion last year. Narrowing that gap would create jobs and boost the gross national product. Government figures released last week showed that the GNP grew at an annual rate of only 1.2% in the fourth quarter of 1985 and 2.3% during the year as a whole, the smallest increase since 1982. The weakening dollar will also reduce demands that Congress take protectionist action...
Over the past four decades, three Royal Commissions have concluded that the unions are largely responsible for Fleet Street's chronic money woes. Terminal may be a better adjective: on gross revenues of nearly $2 billion last year, Britain's 17 major papers made about $34 million in profits, nearly all of it accounted for by Murdoch's racy Sun, the country's largest daily (circ. 4.1 million...
...like a Corvette with a clogged carburetor. America's output grew only 2.3%, compared with a full-throttle 6.6% in 1984. But TIME's Board of Economists, * which met last week in Manhattan, predicts that the country will rev its engine again this year. The group believes that the gross national product will expand by about 3.3% during 1986, a brisk if not blistering pace...