Word: dividend
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...jets, which now carry 56% of United's passengers, United Air Lines made a steep climb; President William A. ("Pat") Patterson announced record third-quarter earnings of $1.97 per share, up from $1.74 a year ago. Ford, riding the compact crest, announced an extra quarterly dividend...
...then punch it onto cards or tape for the computer. With the optical scanner, which can read up to 96,000 cards per day, the computer-and every paper-laden company-has found a powerful ally. Scanners already read and process insurance premium notices, gas station bills, travelers checks, dividend checks. The National Biscuit Co. has cut the time for tallying inventory from a month to three days with a scanner, and a scanner-sorter being tested for the Post Office Department can process letters five times faster than by hand...
...weed out excess or unproductive management, the executive's usual penalty in times of falling profit margins is a pay cut. Douglas Aircraft Co. recently reduced salaries for all employees making more than $12,000 a year by 5% to 25%. After Merritt-Chapman & Scott omitted the quarterly dividend, Chairman and Chief Stockholder Louis E. Wolfson-who can well afford a pay cut-gamely announced last week that he will not accept any of his $100,000-a-year salary until profits pick up and the dividend is resumed...
...Dividend. Since Castro handed him power, Che has taken three crucial steps. He has cut Cuba's main economic ties with the West and hooked them to the Communist world. He has started preparing for the war he expects the U.S. to wage against him. And he has taken bold action to spread his revolutionary influence across the rest of Latin America...
When the U.S. angrily reacted by virtually cutting off 1960 Cuban-sugar imports, Che got a Russian dividend-a threat by Premier Khrushchev to fire rockets at the U.S. if it intervened in Cuba. The gesture moved Che to call Cuba "a glorious island in the middle of the Caribbean, defended by the rockets of the greatest military power in history." Where tanning U.S. tourists and businessmen once sipped daiquiris on the brink of clear blue hotel pools, broad-cheeked Russian and impassive Red Chinese technicians now take their ease...