Word: economists
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Bolivian politics is a game of Byzantine intrigue in which only the master of sly maneuver can hope to survive. In and out of office, the master for the past dozen years has been moderate President Víctor Paz Estenssoro, 56, a pale, impassive economist whose term ends this year. After fending off successive threats from an old foe on the far left and a rising political figure on the right, Paz has now paved the way for almost certain re-election...
Wandering from the problem of governmental interference to the peculiar requirements of the British social structure, Lord Lionel Robbins, a noted English economist, yesterday led a packed Littauer Auditorium through a complicated maze of problems and prospects for higher education in Britain...
...Mary Keyserling, 53, economist, wife of Harry Truman's economic adviser Leon Keyserling. Job: director, Women's Bureau, Labor Department...
...Bullish Force. In his television address to the nation, President Johnson passed along a prediction by a little-known Wall Street economist, Pierre Renfret, that business spending would grow by 20% this year-though he neglected to mention that Renfret meant only spending by manufacturing companies, expects overall spending to rise just 12%. That is still a pretty tall order, but one that the economy may well be able to fill...
After a two-year study of 250 major option plans, Economist John A. Menge of Dartmouth College found that during the 1950s former American Motors Chairman George Romney realized an after-tax profit of $564,000 on sales of his optioned shares, and RCA Chairman David Sarnoff pocketed $1,126,000 from his options. In the 1950s, according to Menge, these were some of the paper profits of executives who held on to most of their options: former Coca-Cola Chairman W. E. Robinson, $1,270,000; Clifford Hood, former president of U.S. Steel, $1,362,000; former General Electric...