Word: blyth
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...told the B-School to notify deferred admits we're interested," said Donald Linn, vice president of Blyth Eastman Paine JWebber, an investment banking firm. "It's one more opportunity for us to get a shot at qualified people...
...these young companies are frequently dealing with promising but untested technologies in untried markets. Despite the uncertainties involved, investors are now rushing to buy the sudden surge of new stock issues as they dream of discovering the next IBM or Xerox. Says Peter Rawlings of Wall Street's Blyth Eastman Paine Webber: "We really have not seen a stock market like this since the early...
Eiseley's most significant accomplishment, though, is to rediscover another English naturalist named Edward Blyth, who as early as 1835 set forth the tenets of what later became known as the the ory of natural selection. Darwin, Eiseley argues persuasively, was more than just a little familiar with Blyth's work, and even quoted from one of his papers. But Darwin never publicly acknowledged, let alone discharged, his debt to Blyth, and history has been no kinder. Eiseley's ex pose in no way diminishes Charles Dar win's importance, but it does help ex plain...
...deal with Western executives, and vice versa. He knows the Saudis about as well as any Westerner can. He ranges far from his elegant London offices, where he has been the international chief for a series of American banks: initially Manufacturers Hanover, then First Boston, now Blyth Eastman Dillon−INA. He is one of those multinational deal makers who live in Concordes, four-star hotels and mahogany-walled counting houses. He always rides a crest in good times and bad, making money −much money−despite a few sour deals among all the bonanzas...
There are no heroes or heroines, Blyth seems to be saying, just people, doing unto others what they would not have others do unto them. - Gerald Clarke