Word: iciness
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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That's a bigger number than I would have figured, but it squares with another ICI study several weeks ago that shows that 77% of stock-fund holders buy and sell through some sort of advice filter. Individuals now have enough wealth at stake so that it seems they are less inclined to go it alone. That may mean Merrill Lynch, down 30% from its high last April, is a better bargain than E-Trade, down 68%. Merrill is in the advice biz, which may have value after all, especially if the market continues to churn...
Christopher G. Weeramantry, vice president of the International Court of Justice (ICI), urged law students to take a part in shaping the changing future of international law in a talk yesterday at the Law School's Pound Hall...
...provide pro bono legal services to victims and their families, O.J. Simpson attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr. and Oklahoma City attorney John Merritt have filed a suit on behalf of several survivors against the maker of the fertilizer allegedly used as an ingredient in the bomb. (The company, ICI Explosives USA Inc., has responded that there is no evidence it was their fertilizer.) And last week University of Texas law professor Michael Tigar, well known in legal circles for his defense of such high-profile clients as John Demjanjuk and the Chicago Seven, took on the defense of Terry Nichols...
...Simpson lawyer Johnnie Cochran is representing four victims of the Oklahoma bombing in their suit against Imperial Chemical Industries, a company that makes fertilizer like that used in the bomb. They claim ICI was negligent for not including an additive to make the fertilizer less volatile. ICI says there's no proof its fertilizer was used to make the bomb...
...just begun to take off. Every potential innovation, whether a new kind of windmill or biodegradable plastic made from plants, is attracting attention from companies in a host of industrial nations. The U.S.'s Du Pont is in a race with Germany's Hoechst and Britain's ICI, among others, to develop replacement chemicals for ozone-destroying chlorofluorocarbons (cfcs). Germany's Siemens is vying with such firms as Amoco in the U.S. and Sanyo in Japan to produce cheap, efficient solar electric cells...