Word: bonde
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Collaborating with Iker on that last-minute effort was Associate Editor George J. Church, a TIME Business writer since 1969 who wrote this week's cover story with the help of Reporter-Researchers Bonita Siverd and Gail Perlick. Like former Bond Trader William Simon, Church got his start on Wall Street, first as a correspondent and later as a front-page editor for the Wall Street Journal (which is singled out in this week's Press section as one of the ten best newspapers in America). No skeptic about the reality of the energy crunch, Church...
That cynicism immensely complicates the job of Washington's latest whirlwind, William E. (for Edward) Simon, chief of the new Federal Energy Office. A bond trader who was unknown outside Wall Street in late 1972, a modestly publicized No. 2 man at the Treasury as recently as last November, the 46-year-old Simon in the past month has become one of the most powerful and visible figures in a Government starved for leadership. Now he is putting his credibility on the line almost daily to declare, in press release after news conference after TV interview, that the shortage...
...Edward M. Kennedy '54 (D-Mass.) spoke last night before a reception at the Faculty Club to benefit the Southern Election Fund, whose chairman is Georgia State Representative Julian Bond...
...year-old Bond, who was proposed as a vice-presidential nominee at the 1968 Democratic National Convention, organized the found four years ago with the intention of building black political power up from the lower levels. He said in his appeal for funds at the $25-per-person affair that the funds "can't take on the big state-wide candidates in the South because they are too strongly entrenched...
...Bond said that since its inception the fund has contributed $150,000 to southern campaigns. He said before an audience of 60 that the fund is overcoming public ignorance of its cause...