Word: productive
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...most comprehensive measure -- the gross national product of goods and services -- the U.S. expansion is still moving forward. For the first three months of the year, GNP increased at an annual rate of 4.3%, the largest quarterly gain since 1984. While that surge partly reflected a rise in the production of unsold goods that will probably not be repeated in the second quarter, it was welcome news. The employment statistics provide further evidence of the economy's momentum. In April the jobless rate fell to 6.3% of the work force, down from 6.6% the previous month...
Hamawaki knew well what Japanese consumers demand: a quality product, good service and a wide variety of models and features. To back up its already strong reputation for quality and service, BMW spent more than $10 million on a Japanese distribution center, which rushes spare parts to the company's dealers within 24 hours. Since 1981, the number of BMW models offered has increased from seven to 21. And each model, from the basic 318i ($26,000) to the top of the line M6 ($90,000), is laden with "standard features" that are usually options in Europe...
...starvation every day, our economic assistance has dropped by almost 50 percent in real dollars since 1960--and much of that is concentrated now on just two countries, Egypt and Israel. Among the industrialized nations, we have sunk to 17th in the proportion of our gross national product that we give to aid our poorer neighbors abroad. Some even have suggested that $200 million is to much to give to Aquino's Philippene government...
...trying to rethink the implications of literary history for hermeneutics. Nowhere is this radical project illustrated better than in the humorous and ingenious, "My Monster/My Self", in which Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is read as an autobiographical confession of maternal rejection. The literary monster is analyzed as product of "a single parent household," the unwanted brainchild of a mad (pro)creator, who in childhood was abandoned by her own mother...
...which until now could operate only at liquid-helium temperatures. For both technical and economic reasons, IBM abandoned its Josephson junction project in 1983. But IBM Physicist Sadeg Faris quit the company, obtained licenses for the technology and formed Hypres, Inc., which has begun marketing its first Josephson junction product -- a high-speed oscilloscope. Says Faris: "The new materials are at a primitive stage, but we're anxious to exploit them to bring down costs and improve speed." Since switches are a limiting factor in computer speed, an economical Josephson junction could prove invaluable...