Word: quilting
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...jurisdiction, but some scholars believe that the legislators would be exceeding that power if they took away the authority to enforce something as sacred as the First Amendment. If the bill becomes law, prayer cases could still be tried in state courts, but that might produce a crazy quilt of constitutional interpretations...
...program worked just that way, there would be no problem. But Miguel's curriculum is a tiny part of a crazy quilt of local, state and national attempts to cope with the growing number of U.S. schoolchildren, some 3.5 million of them, for whom English is a second language. Now lumped under the heading of bilingual education, these efforts began with special ESL (English as a second language) classes. Later came attempts to teach children in their native tongue for a few years so they would not fall behind while they learned English. In 1968 Congress passed the Bilingual...
...leader this time was Saudi Arabia, which unilaterally added $2 to the $26 per bbl. that it already charges. The largest OPEC producer argued that with worldwide demand for oil weak, such an increase would somehow restore "order and unity" to the crazy-quilt patchwork of global oil prices. Yet hardly had the Saudis acted than Libya, Kuwait, Iraq and the United Arab Emirates announced matching increases of their...
Financial markets were swept by a crazy quilt of slumping and surging prices. Businessmen fretted over whether Carter's "disciplined" new effort to make money and credit scarcer and more costly would pitch the economy into recession for real, or if it would perhaps be swept aside by another onrush of inflation. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones average of 30 leading industrial stocks dropped 23 points on the first day after Carter announced his program. It then bounced back and forth before finally closing out the week down 26.5 points at 785, its lowest level since April...
This crazy-quilt winter weather was the result of erratic changes in the usual pattern of westerly winds-especially the high-altitude jet stream-that whip across the U.S. Part of a broader global feature known as the circumpolar vortex, the winds in winter usually follow a sharply undulating path round the Northern Hemisphere, like the bottom of a whirling crinoline skirt. Sweeping northeast over the Pacific, the winds pick up warmth and moisture. Heading down again from the cold north, they cause heavy rain and snowstorms from the Rockies through the heartland to New England...