Word: upward
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...land like conventional jets but are powered by "scramjets" that, once aloft, will enable them to swoop into orbit or go halfway around the world in two hours. Cargo will be shot into orbit by electromagnetic rail guns that ramp up the sides of mountains, or will be flung upward by looping orbital tethers, sort of like David's slingshot...
Workers at computer stations may position their hands over the keyboard with the sensitive wrist cocked upward or downward, compressing the tendons, ligaments and nerves that run through its narrow confines. People working with typewriters are more likely to hold their hands suspended straight forward, the wrists flat. Old-style typewriter keys also generally have a certain amount of spring, while computer keys often strike against a hard, unforgiving base. "These simple things sound trivial, but they are not when you're locked into one position, working all day long," says Marvin Dainoff, director of the Center for Ergonomic Research...
Whether central policy has shifted or not, Coreprofessors and teaching fellows said they havedefinitely noticed an upward trend in section sizethis year...
...dollar slump and the ripple effect felt by other currencies staggered stock and bond markets around the world. Business and consumer confidence, already shaky, suffered another setback. Investors watched helplessly as early in the week stock prices sank and long-term interest rates turned upward, depressing investments and driving up mortgages and other borrowing costs. "Rising rates and a falling dollar -- that's the definition of a currency crisis," says C. Fred Bergsten, director of the Institute for International Economics in Washington. "What it says is that foreigners are pulling out of both U.S. currency and financial markets...
...paradise is in trouble. "Forever, or so it seems," says sociologist Mark Baldassare, who has studied Orange County for 10 years, "this place was on the steepest of upward curves. But today, with every index down, the people who thought they were immune to recessions, the Republican white collar workers, have been caught. Bush will likely carry the county again, but if he doesn't get a 300,000-vote plurality here, there's no way he'll take California." And that, says Representative Robert Dornan, one of the county's five Congressmen, "is iffy at best, unless there...