Word: seniors
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...paper Yale is the favorite, boasting a 5-1 record and a convincing victory over a tough Penn squad that ran all over both Princeton and Harvard. Led by junior Geoff Mearns and old-timer Peter Wehrwein (a senior who took a year off), the guys from New Haven have had a surprisingly successful season to date...
...other end of the field, the Crimson goalies combined for their fifth shutout of the year. Senior Wendy Carle led off for the Crimson and got little work in the first half, straining herself only once when she reached up for an easy save. Barb Mahon took over in the second half and received a light workout, notching two saves...
ARTHUR OKUN: "Sometimes I understand this economy and sometimes I don't," laments Okun, senior fellow of the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C. "I was dead wrong," he admits, in expecting unemployment to go up in September. Instead it dropped, indicating that the economy was far more resistant to a downturn that might check price boosts than had been supposed. Consequently, though Okun is usually vehemently opposed to a policy of relying primarily on money-supply policy to combat inflation, he proclaims himself "not horrified" by Volcker's actions. Okun fears that "interest rates could become so unstable...
...purpose, from paying medical bills to buying a house. Says Saul Klaman, president of the National Association of Mutual Savings Banks: "Those who need credit most will have the most difficulty getting it. That's the way it always is." As prices inevitably rise, says Charles Lehing, senior vice president of New York's Chemical Bank, the people who will have the most trouble will be those on fixed incomes. Adds Lehing: "Most of these people don't have enough disposable income to become eligible to borrow, and the costs of their necessities will...
...speech was yet another masterly performance by one of the world's premier political orators, even though it contained little that Castro had not said before. In Washington's view, the speech was primarily intended to enhance Castro's prestige as a senior statesman of the Third World. When he first addressed the U.N., in 1960, the 33-year-old Castro was a fledgling revolutionary, overshadowed by such neutralist giants as Yugoslavia's Josip Broz Tito, then 68, and India's Jawaharlal Nehru, 70. Castro has now survived for 20 years as Cuba...