Word: risen
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Even as American refineries have been closing, imports of petroleum products into the U.S. have been steadily increasing. The Energy Information Administration, a federal clearinghouse for energy data, reports that imports, including fuel oil, finished gasoline and gasoline-blending components, have risen about 24% during the past four years. The amount of gasoline entering the U.S. market from abroad nearly doubled during that period, to 291,000 bbl. a day in 1984, while imports of oil requiring further processing increased more than 50%, to an average 230,000 bbl. daily...
...generalizations about East Coast insensitivity. They like to assume that all of the here at Harvard are born-and-bred snobs--just as they assume that we all live on Beacon Hill and prepped at Andover and Exeter. The rest of the country acts as if it has somehow risen to a higher spiritual ground by moving out to the country. I doubt that the clean air makes them morally pure...
...communications companies, portending more big mergers and fast price rises. ABC stock shot up $31, to nearly $106, and issues of some other companies in the field also climbed sharply. At week's end CBS had gained 20 1/4, to 108 3/ 4, and RCA, parent of NBC, had risen 4 7/8, to 42 7/8. Newspaper publishers Gannett and Knight-Ridder were up too, as was the stock of Chicago's Tribune Co. Australian Publisher Rupert Murdoch, whose properties include the New York Post and New York magazine, added even more zest to the media merger mania: he offered...
...capitals (Albany, N.Y., and Raleigh, N.C.) where its first two television stations were located, has reaped record earnings in each of its 30 years. True to form, 1984 revenues rose 23%, to $940 million, while profits of $143 million were up 24% over 1983. The company's stock has risen along with its fortunes, from $18 per share in 1974 to a peak of $174.50 last year, earning Capital Cities a reputation among investors as "the Cadillac of the industry...
...timid, but finally I said, 'You speak of Christ's suffering. What about the children who have suffered not 2,000 years ago, but yesterday? And they never talk about it." Mauriac was to recall the look in the speaker's pained eyes, "as of a Lazarus risen from the dead, yet still a prisoner within the grim confines where he had strayed, stumbling among the shameful corpses . . . I could only embrace him weeping...