France has seldom seen an election like this, whipsawing from mass boredom to high drama in the two weeks between the first and second rounds.
12.
It has long since mastered the art of whipsawing cities that want franchises against those fearful of losing them and the taxpayer has always been the loser.
13.
The effects have been whipsawing their way around business circles, threatening to dampen the economy further with more cutbacks in traditional gift-giving and entertainment.
14.
From all indications, shoppers are not planning to spend less this year, despite the whipsawing of the stock market and fears that the economy may be slowing.
15.
The whipsawing has given Sonic president Wally Walker just enough room to wonder whether Karl is capable of all the tasks required of a coach in an increasingly fractious sport.
16.
Whipsawing the networks these days is easier than it should be, given the expanding size of media corporations and the diminishing importance of network news in those sprawling organizations.
17.
By the end of 2001, Makarenko said, the whipsawing had worked so well that a reinvigorated Kremlin no longer needed swing votes to pass most of its agenda.
18.
Cautious trading was the rule Thursday, some market participants said, as sellers and buyers engaged in a tug-of-war, with prices whipsawing throughout the session.
19.
The town was severely underdeveloped at the time of its founding so he brought with him politicians, builders, Nova Scotia timber men, and Englishmen skilled in whipsawing and cutting joists and rafters.
20.
January crude oil futures jumped 79 cents to dlrs 19.48 a barrel at the New York Mercantile Exchange Tuesday, after whipsawing to a day's high of dlrs 19.80 a barrel.