Word: clint
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...Marble Urn. Clint Hester had been friend and companion to his only son Bob. They often hiked and camped together in the Sierra Nevada. When young Bob decided that he wanted to learn to fly, Clint gladly encouraged him, allowed Bob to buy his own plane when he was 17. During World War II, air-struck Bob Hester inevitably joined the Air Corps. On Dec. 6, 1943, the B-24 that he was co-piloting disappeared in a raging storm over the Sierra Nevada. Search parties could find no trace of the plane or of its six-man crew...
...using the parliamentarian's approach," said one anxious friend last week. "He waits around for the precise moment and then moves by a set of rules he knows. But in the national game you don't wait, and you don't have any set of rules." Clint Anderson was more confident: "I know that he doesn't move until he has the votes. He has this great skill of putting votes together. I don't know why he can't do it on a national scale. He'll find...
ANITA O'KEEFFE YOUNG, widow of Railroadman Robert R. Young, wants to sell her Alleghany Corp. stock to Texas Millionaire Clint W. Murchison for estimated $11 million. Sale of stock, crucial to control of Alleghany, is being temporarily blocked by suit filed by a Young relative. When and if deal is closed, Murchison is expected to ask for at least two seats on Allegheny's nine-man board, put new zip into the company...
Many another top executive sadly observes that the man who is brilliant in the boardroom is often a bore at the microphone. "Too many businessmen cannot give a speech; they have to make an address," says Chicago Executives' Club President Clint Youle, who has heard hundreds of them. "They speak on subjects so lofty they cannot say anything that has not been said umpteen times before." Furthermore, says one Florida executive, many businessmen are barely articulate, mumble in meaningless cliches (some favorites: "broadly defined policies," "hitting the mark foursquare"), talk only to each other, and say only what they...
...Pocket. On behalf of himself and other small stockholders, Phillips charged that Bob Young had no right to make a deal in 1955 that gave 130,000 shares, or almost half of Alleghany's voting stock in Investors Diversified, to Texas Millionaire Clint W. Murchison. He also complained that Young, Kirby, et al had illegally used Alleghany funds during the Central fight by making loans that enabled Young's good friend Murchison to buy 800,000 shares of Central stock, thus insuring a proxy victory. Hauling the defendants through one court after another, Phillips demanded that they reimburse...