Word: clint
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Tecon (pronounced tay-con, because the company's motto is "We take on anything") is headed by Clint Murchison Jr., 30-year-old son of the multimillionaire Texas wheeler-dealer (TIME, May 24). Eager for the worldwide attention that the job will create, up-and-coming Tecon agreed to move soft shale from the hill at $1.06 a cu. yd., rock at $1.46, and to finish the job in 15 months. Nobody knew exactly how much shale and how much rock would have to be removed to make the canal safe, but official estimates ran as high...
...college, Gambler Murchison was caught in a crap game. He was told he could stay if he signed a no-craps pledge. But Murchison would not make such a promise; he returned to Athens as a teller in his father's bank. Instead of staying in his cage, Clint spent most of his time drinking coffee and drumming up business at the corner drugstore. He could not be bothered counting small change that was not included in the bank's legal reserves. But a bank inspector reasoned differently, ordered Murchison to count every dime in his cage. Murchison...
...entered the Army in 1917 and got a commission, but even the Army could not stop his trading. When the brass on his post ordered some salvage lumber burned, Clint sold it instead for kindling, netted more than $15,000 for the mess fund. (Sid Richardson, meanwhile, had joined a National Guard company where he was allowed to do some oil-lease trading to bolster the outfit's funds...
Like other Texas oilmen, Clint Murchison has also wet his feet in politics. An early Eisenhower supporter, he financed a pro-Ike campaign paper in Texas with Richardson. He has also been a vocal and financial supporter (for about $40,000) of Senator McCarthy, and has entertained him at his Mexican ranch. Murchison once said: "I like Joe McCarthy. He's done the greatest possible service to his country." Recently, he has cooled somewhat: "I was for him and still am, but with more reservations...
...Clint Murchison is the kind of wheeler-dealer who tends to prove that statement. Though he is now turning over many of his properties to his sons, that does not mean he is retiring from combat: "I guess you could say that I am starting all over again." Could it be uranium? Murchison's face lights up at the word; he has already equipped some of his oilfield crews with detecting devices, just in case. Murchison has no doubts about which of his many deals gives him the most pleasure. Says he: "The next...