Word: annually
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...annual budget message, the city manager asked the Council to set priorities for approximately $52 million worth of capital improvements projected over the next five years. The City is already committed to the construction of a new hospital and a new wing for its library. In addition, the School Committee has begun planning for three new elementary schools. The cost of these five items will be more than $17 million, although the state and federal governments will pay a substantial part of the bill...
...which has not changed much since William's day-and to some extent, holds him responsible. According to Jean Comps, 54, village schoolmaster and official secretary (also renowned for his fine home-made Calvados), the liege lord of Normandy in 1060 forced Veauville to ante up an annual ten gold talents to the nearby abbey of St.-Wandrille. The town kept right on paying the tithe for the next 700 years, until the Revolution of 1789 put an end to all that...
...plain-talking Texan who has spent years poking around the innards of high-compression engines, Carroll Shelby, 43, can get pretty tense. Whenever he thinks about Enzo Ferrari, which is often, he also thinks about the annual 24-hour Le Mans race-and what happens to his blood pressure then is not good for a man who has a bad heart...
...amount of information disclosed by a typical European corporation in its annual report to the stockholders is, by U.S. standards, hardly enough to cover the head of a pin. Final profit or loss figures are given-without explanation about how they were arrived at. Such basic items as true earnings, performance of subsidiaries, executive compensation, method of evaluating assets, and even total sales are treated as top company secrets. As one result, prospective European investors, having little more to go on than intuition, are leary about sinking their savings into stocks. This fact has contributed to the generally depressed state...
Reginald H. Phelps '30, lecturer on German and acting dean of the GSAS has taken his annual high-principled stand in favor of bureaucratic inflexibility. To the forty students denied scholarships next year because they missed a deadline they'd never heard of, Phelps may seem rigourous beyond necessity. But Harvard is surely better off not coddling such flagrant calender-scoffers. Send them to Vietnam or M.I.T. As an alumnus, I sympathize with Dean Phelps' firm campaign to keep Harvard free of time-table Schlamperei and the crypto-inverts who practice...