Word: chart
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Within a year, Phillips had sold Presley's contract to RCA Victor for $25,000. He says he never regretted the decision, never looked back. He soon had another rockabilly prodigy, Carl Perkins, whose "Blue Suede Shoes" kicked some serious chart butt: #1 country & western, #2 pop and rhythm 'n blues. Johnny Cash, the Arkansas gent with a grave voice and a lifer's stare, recorded "I Walk the Line": #1 country, #17 pop. Roy Orbison, who would not fully flower till the '60s, did an early stretch at Sun, recording some goofy rockers and writing a hit song...
Even as WorldCom's future kept looking rosier to Grubman (see chart), its balance sheet, its "now," was imploding. At the end of 1999, the company claimed $10.3 billion in current assets and $30.3 billion in current liabilities and long-term debt. By year-end 2001, current assets had shrunk to $9.2 billion, while current and long-term debt had swollen to $39.2 billion. Graham liked companies whose current assets were at least twice their current liabilities. This measure, called the current ratio, tells you the working-capital cushion a company has at its disposal. Graham also believed that long...
...Bush White House is strictly top-of-the-organizational-chart, an outfit run by corporate bosses: Dick Cheney from Halliburton, the oil-services giant; Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill from Alcoa; and Commerce Secretary Don Evans from the Denver oil-and-gas outfit Tom Brown. These are capitalists who know how to make a buck and were never ashamed...
...instance. But the principal message is this: taking estrogen and progestin for years in the hope of preventing a heart attack or stroke can no longer be considered a valid medical strategy. (For a detailed look at the pros and cons of hormone therapy for various conditions, see the chart on pages...
...Bush White House is strictly top-of-the-organizational-chart, an outfit run by corporate bosses: Dick Cheney from Halliburton, the oil-services giant; Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill from Alcoa; and Commerce Secretary Don Evans from the Denver oil-and-gas outfit Tom Brown. These are capitalists who know how to make a buck and were never ashamed...