Word: risen
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Tripp Tracy's play has been difficult to pinpoint; perhaps his style looked so effortless last season that anything else must pale by comparison. But his GAA has risen to 3.68, and his wild, get-me-the-Maalox style has backfired on several occasions. In fairness to Tracy, on some weekends the Crimson defense hasn't given him as much support as it has Israel, and his form has been better of late. But Harvard needs two top-notch net-minders if it wants to make any significant playoff noise, and Tracy will admit that he's got some work...
Today's casino-driven prosperity is a somewhat self-contained bubble. The state's welfare case load has risen 54% just since 1991. "We currently have 10,500 new jobs coming online," says welfare administrator Mila Florence, referring to the staffing of the Luxor, Treasure Island and MGM Grand. "The number of persons coming into the state seeking those jobs far exceeds the number of jobs available, so our agency becomes the safety...
...wasn't intended as a job interview, it was enough to impress Clinton that he may have found his candidate. Not only was Inman a policy expert and a businessman with managerial experience, like Clinton he was a small-town boy from the South (East Texas) who had risen...
...change, Detroit is having a good year and is enjoying it largely at the expense of the once indomitable Japanese competition. The Big Three's sales have risen against Japanese automakers for the first time in a decade: U.S. cars posted sales increases of 10.7%, twice those of the Japanese carmakers. Fully 76% of Americans now say they are more likely to shop for an American car than they were five years ago, according to a TIME/Yankelovich poll this week...
Smith: Well, you're aware that it is starting to swing back away from imports to the domestics. And there are a number of reasons for that. The quality gap continues to close. The fact that the yen has risen in value is another major ingredient in that shift. People do look at price, and they look at the quality gap being closed. Since the price favors the domestics, they tend to go domestic. I think another important factor is that the market continues to swing toward trucks, and the Japanese in particular, or even the Europeans, haven't really...