Word: hamer
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...also announced yesterday plans for a mass rally on Sunday at Memorial Church, for which they are "asking for and expecting to receive support from many sectors of the black community." OBU has invited national black leader Floyd McKissick and Fanny Lou Hamer of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party to speak at the rally...
...give to the big institutional investors? The answers to these and other basic questions will depend largely on the views of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington's watchdog over Wall Street. The times would seem to call for a tough-minded decision maker as SEC chairman. In Hamer H. Budge, the SEC has instead a tranquil, kindly administrator who has a penchant for delay. In addition, Budge last week was accused of "gross, clear, conspicuous, transparent conflict of interest...
Another examples of eclectic music was Michael Friedmann's Leuchten, a "work in progress" for four players. I hope the work progresses considerably because in its present pseudo-Webernian condition it seems unimaginative in the extreme and generally unredeemable. Janice Hamer's String Trio, while stronger, suffers from repetitive alternation between cantilena and pizzicato writing...
STOCK MARKET. During his campaign, Nixon stirred much criticism by promising an end to "heavyhanded bureaucratic regulatory schemes" for policing the securities business. Nonetheless, Hamer Budge, new head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, has stressed that he will combat malpractices as vigorously as his activist predecessor, Manuel Cohen, who has praised Budge. A judge from Idaho, Budge is particularly eager to protect the interests of small investors...
Concern about Risks In his first pronouncement as the new chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, former Idaho Congressman Hamer Budge complained last week that some complex forms of conglomerate financing offer only "an illusion of security." Testifying before a House subcommittee, he counseled investors against being misled by "apparent improvements" in the earnings of aggressive conglomerates. "Those who are engineering the present wave of takeovers," he said, "appear to find short-term profits so tempting that they ignore long-term risks." Later, Robert W. Haack, president of the New York Stock Exchange, told another House subcommittee that...