Word: slipping
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...opinions spread across the full spectrum. But while in past years the great majority saw nothing except boom on boom, this time the prevailing forecast was for a downturn-though a minor one. Of 68 conference members answering a poll on 1958 business, most agreed that business would slip a bit until well into 1958, with an upturn starting late in the year. Only five expected a steady rise throughout the year; only four predicted a continuous decline. Said Leonard Smith, commercial research manager for U.S. Rubber Co.: "This is one of those modern recessions where no one feels much...
...pass interference play on the one yard line and the accidental slip of a Crimson defender gave the Princeton freshmen two fourth-quarter touchdowns and a 13 to 7 comeback victory over the previously undefeated Yardling eleven at Soldiers Field last Saturday morning...
...comes to New York to study at City College. She is soon modeling size tens in the garment center as well, with half the members of the garment trade making very forward passes. But she straight-arms them one and all, and overeager professors too; and after one near slip because of temporary despondency, she finds that the offers of mink stoles are changing into proposals of marriage...
...Roger M. Blough noted nine-month earnings of $329 million for a 9.7% return on sales v. $243.3 million and an 8% return in 1956. All told this year, said Blough, the industry will produce 115 million tons, just under the 1956 level. Next year, though the industry may slip back to an operating rate somewhere between 70% and 80% (v. 80% now) for six months or so, the tonnage drop will be less since the industry will add another 5,000,000 tons to its current 138 million-ton annual capacity. Thus, actual production will keep pace with this...
...Since Mozart." In Forbidden Childhood (written with New York World-Telegram and Sun Music Critic Louis Biancolli), Ruth Slenczynska recalls how her father cursed her, kept her hungry and beat her into being a genius. Nine hours a day, seven days a week, she sat practicing in her slip at the keyboard, never wearing a dress because the sweat would have ruined it. Her mother's protests were useless. In all things the terrified child obeyed the man who, after saving her from drowning, told her: "I just saved your life. Your life belongs to me and me alone...