Word: upswinging
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Despite the small number of current members whose names are now on the board, Dennison foresees an upswing in the cyclical rise and fall of membership. "We've had as many as 355 row on a single day," he said, "and we have about 160 freshmen rowing."
Too Early. Studebaker had almost weathered the crash when President Erskine made a fatal mistake. Recalled Hoffman: "Erskine figured that in 1931 the back of the Depression was broken, and that business would be on the upswing. So he started to expand in that year. Harold Vance went to Detroit...
The number of students suffering from serious colds and flu is on the upswing, but is nowhere near epidemic proportions, Miss Rata Corbett, Stillman Infirmary superintendent, said yesterday.
On the eve of the Electoral College session, the states officially completed the count of the popular vote last November: ¶62,042,777 ballots were cast. Of these, 494,916 were voided, leaving 61,547,861 as the count for the record books, the largest ever in U.S. election...
The Hollywood product during 1952 showed a marked upswing in "wholesome and moral qualities." This news was reported last week by the Most Rev. Michael J. Ready, chairman of the Bishops' Committee on Motion Pictures to a Washington gathering of Catholic bishops (see RELIGION).