Word: exceedingly
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...also watches the stock market. That is not surprising, considering his wealth. Solti's combined earnings from concerts and recordings now probably exceed a quarter-million dollars a year. Royalties from his disks, spurred by the popularity of his Ring and Mahler cycles, have risen drastically in the past several years; he is comforted by the knowledge that if anything happened to him ("Look, I am 60 after all"), future royalties would certainly assure his young family a good income for at least the next 15 years. Yet signs of wealth are extremely hard to detect in his lifestyle...
...past, a woman leaving work to bear a child forfeited her pay. The new policy treats maternity leaves the same as leaves for illnesses, allowing the woman to collect pay if her leave does not exceed the number of days allowed for sick leave...
...travel around the universe, the Enterprise must move at speeds faster than light. Since this is impossible physically, the Enterprise must "warp" space. The Enterprise's engines use matter and anti-matter for propulsion, the annihilation of dual matter creating the fantastic power required to "warp" space and exceed the speed of light...
...environmental issues. Tanker traffic would almost certainly result in oil spillage and leaks from the pipeline-it would traverse three earthquake zones-could endanger the ecology of the arctic tundra. Yet the conservationists' biggest weapon turned out to be a narrow technicality: the required right of way would exceed the legal maximum 54-ft. width. The Administration looked to the Supreme Court to get around that legal scruple, but last week the court refused to review a lower-court decision upholding the law. Now the pipeline proposal will be bucked to Congress, where it may create...
...known reserves, and they are bargaining with increasing skill. Their income, which was $4.4 billion a year five years ago, has soared to more than $10 billion and by 1980 could easily reach $40 billion. If that holds true, the income of the Arab nations would then exceed the combined earnings of FORTUNE'S current 500 largest U.S. industrial corporations. The richest oil state of all, Saudi Arabia, which has a population smaller than that of New Jersey (about 7,000,000), would have greater monetary reserves than the U.S. and Japan combined...