Word: maynards
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...squad, which had won a record nine gold medals. But last week they finished with eight medals -- three gold, three silver and two bronze. Except for the boycotted 1984 Games, it was the best U.S. total since 1904. The gold winners: bantamweight Kennedy McKinney, 22, light heavyweight Andrew Maynard, 24, and heavyweight Ray Mercer, at 27 the oldest U.S. fighter, who danced delightedly around the ring after knocking out Korea's Baik Hyun-man. Light middleweight Roy Jones, 19, lost a plainly mistaken decision to Korean Park Si-Hun (even some Korean fans disagreed with it) but wound up with...
...called the settlement he reached with Shevardnadze "absolutely satisfactory." It was initialed by Maynard Glitman, who negotiated the treaty, and Col. Gen. Nikolai Chervov, the senior arms control adviser to the Soviet military...
...newspaper, says former Washington Post National Editor Peter Osnos, but "sometimes it seems to me they don't edit for the readers, they edit for the Pulitzer committee." Of course, like most of those that actually capture a prize, the Inquirer delivers. "Get that good," says Board Member Robert Maynard, editor-publisher of the Oakland Tribune, "and I don't care who you are, you're going to win Pulitzers...
...biggest elements in Reagan's landslide re-election was the widespread belief that he had brought the U.S. a kind of permanent prosperity. Reaganomics -- which meant cutting taxes and incurring deficits beyond anything John Maynard Keynes ever dreamed -- struck some experts as voodoo economics (as the future Vice President George Bush christened it in 1980), but the boom rolled on. A doubled national debt of more than $2 trillion? Trade deficits of more than $15 billion a month? What did that matter, when inflation had been cut to about 4.5%, unemployment to 5.9%, and the Dow Jones soared well over...
...prepared a study showing ten points on which the Soviets had hardened their position from the one they had left on the table when they walked out in late 1983. With much self-righteous fanfare, the Soviets slowly meted out "concessions" that they had already made in the past. Maynard Glitman, the chief American negotiator on INF, told his Soviet counterpart, Alexei Obukhov, "You may take six hours or six days or six weeks or six months to get back to where you were in 1983. We don't care. But you'd better know this: when you get back...