Word: cash
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...apologies for it," he said. "The word comes from the Latin speculari -to observe. I observe." So carefully did he observe that he was able to write in his two-volume autobiography, "At 32, I had $100,000 for every year of my age, and I had it in cash...
...whole atmosphere of U.S. life invites more and more borrowing. Bankers cannot seem to shovel their cash out fast enough, are less interested in what a person or company can put up in the way of hard collateral than in what they have to offer in future earning power. Madison Avenue dances 1,500 advertisements a day before the average U.S. consumer, further tempting him to borrow and buy. The Government encourages borrowing not only by keeping interest rates low but also by making almost all interest payments taxdeductible. Says Donald A. Webster, the Minority (Republican) Economist for the Congressional...
...deRoburt, 42, more than trebled his people's royalties (to $1.50 a ton, retroactive to July 1, 1964) and extracted yet another price boost (to $1.97), effective next year. The Australian government, which administers the island as a U.N. trust territory, will hold most of the islanders' cash in trust until the time comes to move...
...watch for NBC, the nightly Tonight show. Then by choice he tapered off the last three seasons with a mere weekly caper. Last week, at 48, Paar went off the air altogether to boss a TV and FM station he bought control of (putting up $1,350,000 in cash) in Poland Spring...
...More Respected School. Litchfield's defenders argue that he is being made a scapegoat for lax fiscal supervision by Pitt trustees. A dynamic chancellor is too busy churning out ideas, they say, to audit the cash flow. They also argue that in upgrading Pitt, Litchfield chose a costly course: increased emphasis on graduate teaching and research, which require expensive facilities and slight the revenue-producing undergraduate enrollment...