Word: jumped
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...wasn't especially fast or big so I narrowed the events in which I could participate to three: the high jump, the javelin, and the pole vault," Spanos said. "I thought it [pole valuting] looked ridiculous but one of my friends was doing it, so I gave it a shot. Seven feet was the first height I cleared. It seemed like a mile...
...Tufts 7:53.30; Distance relay 1 NU 10:12.3, 2. BU 10:12.3, 3. BC 10:28/9, 4. H 10:37.5, 5. Brandeis 10:48.8. One-mile relay 1 BU 3:18.02, 2. NU 3:21.01, 3. MIT 3:21.41, 4. BC 3:21.87, 5. H 3:24.79; High jump: 1. Saunders (BU) 7-1, 2. HAgle, (BU) 0-0, 3. Hopkins *(NU) 0-0, 4. Sutherland (Tufts) and Colfrey (BC) 0-7. Pole vault: 1 Poullon (Tufts) 15-2. 2. Yates (NU) 14-4, 3. Hutchinson (NU) 14-6. 4 Randall 144 S. Vest...
...growing jobless rate comes at a crucial time for the nation, since the Reagan Administration's economic program of budget and tax cuts is only now beginning to take effect. As the President pointed out in his State of the Union message, a 1% jump in the unemployment rate raises the federal deficit by $25 billion because of lost taxes and additional unemployment benefits. For the first time in years, polls show that more Americans are worried about unemployment than inflation. The jobless rate, if it keeps climbing, could well become the primary focus of the political debate right...
During the Carter Administration, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance argued that arms control was so important that it ought to be insulated from linkage. National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski retorted that Congress would impose punitive sanctions anyway, so the Administration had better Stay one jump ahead and exert some linkage of its own. But with the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in late 1979, domestic political support for arms control and détente all but evaporated...
During the first three months of 1981, the money supply expanded sharply. Then from April to July it contracted equally abruptly. Between midsummer and late October money again began slowly expanding, but beginning in November the monetary base exploded anew, growing at an annual rate of 13.7%. This jump in the growth of money is now perplexing the Federal Reserve as much as it is enraging the Administration. Said Anthony Solomon, president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank: "Frankly, there's no way of knowing precisely what is causing the bulge, but the problem is most likely...