His career went into a tailspin as the children of the '60s rejected squareness. |
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An Arsenal defeat could lead to a desperate tailspin damaging the two crucial cup ties that come along in February. |
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This emotional tailspin lasted all the way through Sunday, rendering me monosyllabically uncommunicative for the entire duration. |
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With business activity fading and IT investment in a tailspin, many now fear that productivity will continue to hit the skids. |
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The stock price of the combined company declined more than 75 percent as Wall Street went into a tailspin and advertising swooned. |
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Currently US airlines are in a tailspin over the decline in passengers taking to the air. |
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When the airline industry went into a tailspin, the government, banks and other backers rallied round. |
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But now, if the doom-mongers are to be believed, the group will tailspin and be sold off bit by bit to the highest bidder. |
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About 600 miles out, Erwin broadcast a frantic message that he was in a tailspin and headed for the ocean below. |
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His low point seemed to be the summer of 1994, when the baseball strike put the peanut and Crackerjack industries into a tailspin. |
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His beautifully judged film matches the moments of comedy with glimpses of the unspeakable tragedies that can send a life into tailspin. |
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Paramount among those is a surprise pullback by consumers, which could send the expansion into a tailspin. |
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The 22-year-old already is in a tailspin, having failed to get out of the fifth inning in each of his last three June starts. |
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Commercial airlines were in a tailspin, and Boeing was caught in the downdraft. |
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Shockingly, it was not the mass gay-and-straight wedding that sent some of his peers into a tailspin that bothered Beck. |
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We get the feeling that seeing a woman walk out the door with her suitcases packed is a biannual event for Don, yet it sets him into a depressive tailspin. |
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And judging by the moans and groans coming from some supporters at the moment you would think Burnley are locked in a tailspin of cataclysmic proportions. |
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The sexual revolution has swept up young adults in a perilous tailspin. |
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Although his money has dried up and his poll numbers are in a tailspin, Gibbons insists he is running for reelection next year. |
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Please join our cause and act responsibly and proactively to correct an ecosystem that is in a tailspin. |
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The minister wants to scare us into believing that a doubling of natural gas prices will throw the economy into a tailspin. |
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They can appear calm and comforting one day only to have an unexpected event upset the balance and send things into a tailspin. |
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The current global financial crisis has again caused private capital inflows to take a sharp tailspin. |
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The depression that hit at the end of the 1920s sent Canada into a tailspin. |
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The increase in inventory recorded in the last few quarters is not enough to send the economy into a tailspin. |
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Jump cut to the present day and you find the male menopause has gone into its own tailspin. |
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More importantly, the Asian financial crisis sent property prices into a tailspin, and the government has largely resisted entreaties to bail people out. |
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Their shaky logic may have failed in court, but it did destroy Reems's life, sending him into a tailspin of alcohol abuse and financial and personal despair. |
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The plane then went into a tailspin, rushing towards the ground below. |
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They don't pull the joystick until the tailspin is imminent. |
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The telecom industry was already in a tailspin, so no one wanted to take on the added risk of doing business in areas where they couldn't be sure they'd get paid. |
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The auto industry began 2001 in a tailspin, with dozens of General Motors, Ford and Chrysler plants temporarily idled for periods of a week or more. |
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Affirmative action in construction contracting programs is in a tailspin, with some cities bailing out of what they now see as a legally risky enterprise. |
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The one-time Silicon Valley highflier, which makes software companies use to manage salespeople and call centers, has been in a tailspin for three years. |
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From then on, your looks are thrown into a tailspin with out-of-control tresses, skin problems and misbehaving makeup, all seeming to need time-consuming fixes. |
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The collapse of Enron last December initiated a chain reaction which uncovered serious accounting fraud at a number of US multinationals, and put Wall Street into a tailspin. |
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Then a white supremacist started talking segregation and everything went into a tailspin. |
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A glass of wine may help you go down for the night, but a few too many can send your sleep cycle into a tailspin. |
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Transfers to the provinces for health care and post-secondary education were cut as well, which threw the budgets of the provinces and the territories into a tailspin. |
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With a health care system in chaos, a military in crisis and financial markets in a tailspin, we need a fall budget to address these issues and to provide a detailed costing of yesterday's throne speech promises. |
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While not to burdensome levels from a historical context, enough to send markets into a tailspin, especially when interwoven with the sudden turn into economic recession where demand and credit started to seize up. |
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She got him back on the meds, she said, but he remained in a tailspin. |
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The world economy was in a tailspin and facing disaster to match the 1930s, but Brown had a plan which he had compared to the Bretton Woods agreement that shaped the world's postwar economic infrastructure. |
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As a result, this sent Lawrence in a tailspin, and, most dishearteningly, she lost her sense of humor. |
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Therefore we have to be careful that we do not destabilise the European aviation industry like the reforms in the United States where the entire American aviation industry went into a tailspin. |
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It has been incompetent and, generally, it has been in a tailspin. |
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By the end of 1979, disco was rapidly declining in popularity, and the backlash against disco put the Bee Gees' American career in a tailspin. |
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Do last-minute projects unloaded on you send your temper into a tailspin? |
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Snuggly set behind the wheel, you drive the car as if it was a roller-coaster wagon, gobbling corner after corner without even feeling the outside forces that so desperately try to send the machine into a tailspin. |
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Companies that pay dearly for licences, on the other hand, and do not have this opportunity, may very quickly go into a tailspin on the stock exchange. |
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The three days off work to volunteer went into a tailspin as no minister could say how those days of missing nurses or teachers could be paid for. |
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The worst banking crisis in decades has shown how investment risks can destabilise the broader financial system and even send whole economies into a tailspin. |
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Somebody said here that we had an ecosystem in a tailspin, and we do. |
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This economic torrent is pulling the world into a tailspin, swiftly dragging economies into recession and governments into deficit, regardless of how innocent or how guilty they were in forging this crisis. |
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The loss of the third engine threw the plane into a tailspin. |
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Just hours after leaving the institution, she suffered another tailspin. |
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