Word: trended
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...they did shave and taper. It was a tough meet; we had a lot of great swims.” The Crimson wasted no time in jumping out to an early lead, as it snatched a victory in the 200 yard freestyle relay. Sophomore David Guernsey continued the trend by winning in the next race, the 200 freestyle, and Crimson swimmers finished fourth, fifth, and sixth in the event. Harvard’s distance swimmers set the mark for the squad, as evidenced by their 1-2-3 finish in the 1650 yard freestyle. Junior Sam Wollner narrowly edged teammate...
...Lavietes Pavilion stands, hit a free throw with 1:05 left to record the first point of his career, and Okereke, in his first career appearance, hit a runner in the lane in the game’s final minute. FREE THREES The Crimson continued its season-long trend of hitting its free throws, making 20-of-22 shots from the stripe, including its first 18. The success at the line was largely overshadowed, however, by Columbia’s three-point shooting. “Getting to the free-throw line is a non-factor when three-point shots...
...here is the cause of your doctor's pain in 2007. Behind him or her is a 15-year trend of diminishing fees that shows no signs of abating. Graduating med students aren't blind; they see established physicians with busy practices dropping out. Looking ahead they see more headaches--more controls and regulations, more scrutiny, more liability, less money. So what has the resourceful American doc done...
...worse than organic snacks are the traditional ones trying to be healthy. There are 100-calorie packs of everything, which can't be good for the environment, since you have to open three or four bags every time you eat. "The big trend is all this craziness over trans fats," says Jeremy Selwyn, 36, a Boston software engineer who runs reviews of more than 3,300 snacks on taquitos.net and for the past three years has been an attendee at Snaxpo, the snack-food industry's annual trade show. He bemoans the loss of fried flavor in Cape Cod--brand...
...Yubarians are older than 65, mirroring Japan's own rapid graying. The city's population is shrinking, as is Japan's as a whole. And, thanks to its massive debt, Yubarians will pay more for less - as may all Japanese if the aging country can't reverse the trend of shrinking incomes and shrinking hope...