Word: carvell
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Arizona Roy Elson California Pierre Salinger Connecticut Thomas Dodd Delaware Elbert Carvel Florida Spessard Holland Hawaii Thomas Gill Indiana Vance Hartke Maine Edmund Muskie Maryland Joseph Tydings Massachusetts Edward Kennedy Michigan Philip Hart Minnesota Eugene McCarthy Mississippi John Sfennis Missouri Stuart Symington Montana Mike Mansfield Nebraska Raymond Arndt Nevada Howard Cannon New Jersey Harrison Williams Jr. New Mexico Joseph Montoya New York Robert F. Kennedy North Dakota Quentin Burdick Ohio *Stephen Young Oklahoma Fred Harris Pennsylvania Genevieve Blatt Rhode Island John Pastore Tennessee Albert Gore Ross Bass Texas Ralph Yarborough Utah Frank Moss Vermont Frederick Fayette Virginia Harry Byrd Washington...
...hour, with another $5 a week per man for the union's medical-care and pension funds. For the trucking companies it means increased expenses of nearly $400 million. For the truckers' customers, it spells an almost inevitable increase in rates. "Obviously," said Chief Industry Negotiator Carvel G. Zwingle, "we will have to do something to pick up the costs...
Among economists, Walter Heller (President Kennedy's chief economic adviser), Paul Samuelson of M.I.T., Beryl Sprinkel of Harris Trust, Theodore Andersen of U.C.L.A., J. Carvel Lange of New York...
Manhattan Economist J. Carvel Lange, who a year ago correctly foresaw that the stock market was "highly vulnerable to a sharp reaction before mid-1962" now predicted a bullish 1963 if a sizable tax cut comes in time. "For maximum effectiveness for growth," said Lange, "the reduction must come while the economy is still rising." If the tax cut is enacted by midyear, he predicted a "strong?perhaps booming?acceleration" that would last well into...
Buyer resistance is fierce." No Plus Factor. Despite these scattered signs of consumer hesitancy, New York's J. Carvel Lange, a specialist in forecasting consumer and financial trends, believes that sales of consumer goods "have been only marginally affected by the decline in the stock market." People not only continue to buy staples, but also such lower-priced luxuries as outboard motors and golf clubs. In fact, says Lange, for the past two months consumers have been buying goods faster than merchants have been replacing their stocks-which means that the economy may shortly benefit from an increase...