Word: rebounds
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...winter to its highest since the Depresion '30s (leaving 11.3% of the labor force without jobs), the Tories' political stock sharply tumbled; though the economy has since taken a turn for the better, in train with the U.S. recovery, Diefenbaker's fortunes have clearly failed to rebound...
Trounced 20-0 by Dartmouth last week, the freshman football squad hopes to rebound with a victory over Boston College today in the Stadium...
...hard put to it to know whose voice to heed. One voice that is heeded is that of the National Association of Business Economists, whose membership is drawn from the top economists employed by U.S. private industry. A year ago, the N.A.B.E. produced a forecast of the 1961 business rebound that proved to be dead right. Last week, meeting in Chicago's Edgewater Beach Hotel, 193 N.A.B.E. members gazed forward into 1962. Their consensus: prospects for''62 are bright-but not brilliant...
...second Crimson goal, the Lions came as close to scoring as they were to do all afternoon. A Crimson player put the ball out of bounds, and on the scramble following the corner back, Columbia managed to bounce a shot at the crossbar and then pick up the rebound for a point-blank set-up. But Harvard goal-keeper John Adams managed to trap the ball with his knees, and then threw it clear...
Soft Demand, Hard Competition. Missing in the 1961 rebound are the two classic causes of inflation: peak demand and pinched supply. Gone are the shortages of housing or steel that characterized the recoveries of 1949 and 1955, and the big bulges in capital spending that contributed to the price spiral of 1955. This year, manufacturers are operating some 20% below capacity, largely because they added so much capacity in the recent past. And cautious consumers still have their purse strings tied, partly out of persistent fear of unemployment. This apprehension has also moderated the "cost-push" pressures of rising wages...