Word: donald
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Plop, Plop. Small businessmen find they have little to fear from the corporate Goliaths. "General Electric and Westinghouse," says Donald Petersen, "have to spend $1,000,000 to set up a production line. They have to have those appliances coming off the end, plop, plop, in pastel blue and pastel yellow. Then they have to spend $3,000,000 to advertise and convince the homeowner he should buy in pastel blue or pastel yellow...
According to Donald Gardner, staff assistant to the committee in charge of implementing the program, the housing units will be similar to Harvard Houses, but with only 50-90 students living in each. Instead of new construction, they will be placed in existing dormitories and fraternity houses...
TIME'S own method of going about the story begins, but does not end, with the official sources. From Moscow, Correspondents Edmund Stevens and Donald Connery cabled reports with a frankness unthinkable in Stalin's day. Washington and London joined in. Then came into play not only TIME'S own Russian-speaking Soviet specialists in New York but a panoply of knowledgeable people in many places, whose estimates in previous Russian situations have proved sound and useful. Our U.N. correspondent talked to a number of delegates with earlier diplomatic experience in Russia. In Boston, our correspondent usually...
...stock in Douglas Aircraft Co., which is more than twice as large as McDonnell Aircraft. Neither he nor Douglas will say how much he holds, but Wall Street estimates run to 200,000 shares, or 5% of the total, worth $4,250,000 at the current market. Since Chairman Donald Douglas Sr. owns only 10,150 shares, President Donald Douglas Jr. only 1,082 shares, and nobody is known to own more than 10% of the stock, McDonnell could easily exercise much power in that company...
Stravinsky: "Les Noces," "Renard" and "Ragtime for Eleven Instruments" (Mildred Allen, soprano; Regina Sarfaty, mezzo; Loren Driscoll and George Shirley, tenors; William Murphy, baritone; Donald Gramm and Robert Oliver, basses; Igor Stravinsky conducting; Columbia). A brightly performed addition to the growing collection of Stravinsky's works conducted by the composer himself. At Stravinsky's own request, Composers Samuel Barber, Aaron Copland, Lukas Foss and Roger Sessions play the piano parts in Les Noces, and in this and the other works Stravinsky shapes performances of water clarity and rhythmic fire. Ragtime is the album's special treat...