Word: bonde
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...from Jackson along the historic Natchez Trace, some of the editors were surprised to find no segregation in places of business. Editor J. Clark Samuel of Massachusetts' Foxboro Reporter was struck by "fine colored schools" and the sight of Negroes and whites "living in compatibility." Publisher John C. Bond of Massachusetts' Rockland Standard noted "a real effort to lift the level of the Negro educationally...
Taxes & Dividends. Before World War II, Germany had a central stock exchange in Berlin. Now there are eight independent regional exchanges-in Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Munich, Hamburg, Berlin, Stuttgart, Hanover and Bremen-which traded $1.5 billion worth of stocks and bonds last year v. only $200 million in 1951. Twice since 1948 Diüsseldorf's stock and bond traders have been forced to move into bigger quarters because trading has grown...
...problem and presented the solution to it. He pledged a revision of NATO from a purely military alliance to a group of nations united by a common danger and a common philosophy and engaging in multilateral trade. Through such an expedient we could not only effectively weld a bond between ourselves and Europe, but, by means of the revitalizing impetus that trade gives to industry, rebuild Europe into a stronger unit, militarily and economically...
Slowdown. Most of the elements of a readjustment have been growing within the market for some time. As credit tightened, pushing business borrowing rates to 4% for prime loans, up to 5½% for others, the spread between stock and bond yields has narrowed, making bonds a more attractive buy. On the Dow-Jones industrial average, the yield is slightly above 4.81% for stocks v. 4.07% for bonds; on Standard & Poor's index, which Wall Street also follows closely, the spread is 4% for stocks v. 3.61% for bonds...
Cellophane Print. At the Packaging Machinery and Material Convention in Cleveland, the Dennison Mfg. Co. showed a new process that makes it possible to bond labels to Cellophane, is more economical than printing. Called Therimage, the bonding process is based largely on an old device of "printing by transfer." A special heat-and-pressure machine is attached to standard packaging units, then labels made of gumlike inks are fed into it. The machine's heat releases the ink from the label, presses it firmly onto the Cellophane, in a process much like fixing a decal...