Word: acumen
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Chicago recently disagreed. Their rather startling conclusions were reported by the Washington Post's David Broder: "Papers and panels at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association draw a picture of a Reagan White House with notably high levels of policy agreement, staff coordination and political acumen...
Well, with a bit of sorcery and even more business acumen, Shelley Duvall, 34, has turned her fantasy into video reality. She is executive producer and guiding spirit of Faerie Tale Theatre, a series of hour-long classics featuring marquee names, which has become a popular and critical success on Showtime, the nation's second-largest pay-television service. Showtime, with 4 million-plus subscribers, is currently airing the sixth of her fanciful tales, The Sleeping Beauty, and plans to show three more by the end of the year. So far, Duvall has enticed Joan Collins, Elliott Gould, Maureen...
...shunned publicity, and he has not even been listed in Who's Who. But lately he has begun edging into view. He is bankrolling the Michigan Panthers, one of the entries in the infant U.S. Football League. In the business world, Taubman's real estate acumen is legendary. In 1977 he and some investors, including friends like New York Investment Banker Herbert Allen Sr. and Henry Ford II, outbid Mobil Corp. and paid $337 million for the Irvine Co., which owned 77,000 acres of mostly vacant land south of Los Angeles in Orange County. Six years later...
Balanchine's musical acumen paid off, spectacularly, in an almost lifelong partnership with Composer Igor Stravinsky, resulting in such landmarks as Apollo (1928), Orpheus (1947) and Agon (1957). The first dance Balanchine ever made to Stravinsky's music in the West was a segment of The Song of the Nightingale in 1925, and the last major project he worked on, the City Ballet's 1982 Stravinsky centennial celebration, included a new version of Noah and the Flood...
Georgi Arbatov is a maneuverer. In a sense such a observation seems self-evident; anyone who, like Arbatov, has reached the height of power in the Soviet Union must have great political acumen and a highly developed some of cunning. A brief look at Arbatov's career only serves to reinforce this impression, for our man clearly knew how to pick--and stick with--the right people. In the early 1960s, for example, Arbatov was a confident of the late Soviet leader Leonid I Brezhnev. And all the way buck in 1964, he became an advisor to Yuni V. Andropov...