Word: jobless
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
More than 60 people stand in line on a typical day at the Central Square state unemployment office, waiting to receive their bi-monthly checks. Recipients in Massachusetts normally receive 30 weeks of unemployment benefits before their funding is cut off, unless the state feels the jobless rate in a particular area is especially severe. At 7.6 percent, unemployment in Cambridge is high, but not high enough for emergency attention. Many people received the unexpected news that no extension would be granted; and for some, it was their last check...
...particular, make a strong point that NATO cannot build the military strength that Reagan desires if the economies of the industrialized West are sapped by high unemployment rates. Said one French diplomat on the eve of the summit: "If unemployment continues to grow across the Continent, what is a jobless youth to think? He is bound to think that it is ab surd to spend billions in national wealth on armaments...
...past 20 years, from seeking a third consecutive term. But Republican leaders were hoping that Rhodes, the G.O.P.'s resident political heavyweight, would challenge Democrat Howard Metzenbaum for the Senate this fall. With Ohio's budget deficit approaching $1.5 billion and its 12.4% jobless rate running eighth highest in the nation, Rhodes decided to step aside altogether. The Democrats are favored to win the race to succeed him. The front runner: onetime Lieutenant Governor and former Peace Corps Director Richard Celeste...
...pair of businessman's Florsheim shoes cost $9.50. The New York Telephone Co. reported that for the first time in ten years more phones were installed than disconnected. The Works Progress Administration, which only that year had begun making efficient monthly counts of the number of jobless in the U.S., announced that the unemployment rate for August...
States that once escaped widespread joblessness are now being squeezed. Booming Texas has been viewed as an El Dorado by laid-off auto and heavy-equipment workers who moved their families there from the Midwest. Now job seekers are finding that the recession has also hit Texas. New oil-and gas-well drilling is down 16.5%, and residential and commercial construction is weak. Two weeks ago, Harry Hubbard, president of the Texas AFL-CIO, warned the jobless to stay away. Said he: "Workers from the East and Northeast better have something lined up before they come down here, or they...