Word: swiftest
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...wrong, for this is pig racing, run on an 85-ft. sawdust oval track, and the porkers do not dawdle: the swiftest swine cross the finish line in 5 or 6 sec. In his best Kentucky Derby style, Holding calls the race: "Pigmalion's first out of the box, with the lead on the rail. Hamtrak settles into second, with Flying Frank third." Suddenly his voice rises excitedly: "Here comes Boaris Karloff on the outside, closing fast around the final turn!" Holding is drowned out by the shouts of the crowd as the pack pounds down the stretch...
...unexpectedly alike and amazingly unlikely straw-haired farm boys who are not only reigning at the top of their games but raising the ceilings of their sports. Confounding normal description, confusing standard measurement, Gretzky is not the slickest skater or hardest shooter, just as Bird is not the swiftest runner or highest jumper. One is frankly too frail for the business, the other simply too agile for his size...
...optimism in the financial markets was tempered by worries about the fate of the dollar, which last week gyrated wildly. At first, it took off on its swiftest, steepest climb since 1978. By Tuesday afternoon it had risen 2% against the West German mark and the French franc and more than 3% vs. the British pound, which sank to an all-time...
Happily for the economy, and for Reagan, there are few signs of a fall-off yet. Quite the contrary; auto sales are the highest since 1978, and production of all goods and services in the first half of 1984 rose at the swiftest pace in 34 years. The general outlook for the rest of the year is for a slowdown to a more sustainable rate of growth, accompanied by some further declines in unemployment, which has fallen from 10.8% in December 1982 to 7.5%. Most surprising, there has been no increase in inflation of the type that usually accompanies such...
Preparations for the federal bailout, the swiftest and most complete on record, began shortly after rumors started circulating about Continental on May 10. Details were hashed out in meetings and phone calls between Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, FDIC Chairman William Isaac and Comptroller of the Currency C. Todd Conover. "This is a very historic thing," said one New York banker. "This is the first time the Fed has been party to any kind of statement that 'nobody is going to lose...