Word: slacking
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Bill Bihrle, Fred Lang and Tom Kline will try to take up the slack left by the graduation of high jumper Ed Baskauskas, while shotputters Naughton and Jay Hughes should have few problems with any squads the Crimson will face...
...controllers at NASA'S Goddard Space Flight Center shut the cameras down until they could locate the problem and send new instructions to the satellite's computer. Meanwhile, the other system, a multispectral scanner built by Hughes Aircraft Co., was fully able to take up the observational slack...
...meritorious service during the recent border skirmishes with Tanzania, handing out a seemingly endless number of "Distinguished Service Orders," "Military Crosses," and "Victorious Service Crosses." During the lengthy ceremony an elderly Asian fainted and was carted off to an ambulance, betel-nut juice dripping like blood from his slack mouth...
Economically, Nixon's budget policy is sound enough. Deficits of the size that the U.S. is running can be tolerated while there is still slack in the economy, as is the case now. As the nation moves toward fuller use of its resources, however, such large deficits could well be highly inflationary. The price for reducing the deficit to hold back inflation would be high: freezing or cutting social programs that may not always have been effective but are nonetheless directed at genuine and often pressing needs. At minimum, Washington would be shifting a heavy fiscal burden onto already...
...exporters in foreign countries have built up such extensive facilities to serve the U.S. market that they will hold their prices down despite dollar devaluation and suffer a profit squeeze rather than let those facilities lie idle. But Eckstein expects other sectors of the economy to take up the slack. Auto sales, including imports, should rise from 10.8 million this year to 11.2 million in 1973. Capital spending should be up about...