Word: growingly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Perils of the Future. But all that has glamour may not always grow. What is the tomorrow of today's growth stocks? Sherman Fairchild, like many experts, believes that the indiscriminate buying of growth stocks "has gone too far." Though brokers are wary of saying flatly that a stock is selling too high, they realize that it is perilous to project earnings five or ten years into the future. Particularly in the growth sector, technology is changing so fast that a new product, a competing process, a better method hit upon by a competitor can collapse a stock...
...Hughes Air craft at 35. At 47, he is a hard-working executive worth $37 million in 443,024 shares of Litton stock. It all started when he quit Hughes in the exodus of brains (TIME, Oct. 5, 1953), started his own company, which is one of the fastest-grow ing electronics firms (1959 sales: $125 million), claims to be the biggest U.S. manufacturer of desk calculating machines...
...Cambridge Tribune prophets sized correctly in 1888, when it wrote. "The summer courses are certain the increase in number, and to grow in interest every year." History does show the success of the nation's older Summer School--even if no one can recall the beginnings. Since its humble origins in Asa Gray's lectures, vacation education has been widely copied and justly admired
Dale's second point was that the power of the Soviet economic offensive and Soviet internal economic growth, as compared to U.S. efforts, has been "grossly, absurdly overrated." His major argument: "Our form of economy, at its present stage of development, seems to have a natural tendency to grow at a rate of between 3.5% and 4% a year. This is quite sufficient to produce a rising standard of living and whatever resources for the government we feel are necessary. The Soviets may or may not continue to grow at a somewhat faster rate. But the prospects of their...
...meeting of the U.S. Chamber of ment Bankers Association, warned that "signs of an imminent recession are grow ing all the time and should not be ignored. There is no way to tell whether it will come in the last quarter of this year or the first quarter of next year," because of slackening business activity and the de cline in inventory accumulation. He was promptly challenged by Dr. Emerson...