Word: ince
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Louis Slovinsky, manager of press relations for Time, Inc., which publishes People Magazine, said yesterday the educators were chosen solely on the basis of the quality of their teaching and their ability to motivate students...
...Homiletic, but Lyons, without consulting Baker, says he has turned control of the magazine over to Galbraith. At week's end Galbraith was flying to New York City to confer with both Lyons and Baker. Legally, the Homiletic had belonged to a Lyons-owned enterprise called Catholic Polls, Inc. One purpose of the organization: to poll the Catholic clergy and prove Lyons' contention that a majority oppose permitting priests to marry...
During the past year or so, such well-known U.S. firms as Bantam Books, ESB, Inc., formerly Electric Storage Battery, and Magnavox have been bought out by foreign companies. But the juiciest attraction could be Copperweld. Largely because of successful management efforts to diversify its line of alloyed steels and specialty tubing used in construction, the company has been consistently profitable. Despite the recession, Copperweld sales in the first half of 1975 climbed to $162.5 million from $150.6 million a year earlier. Profits jumped from $6.2 million to a record $8 million. Copperweld is particularly vulnerable to raiders because...
...move the massive structures, each of which would be as high as a 14-story building and weigh 1,750 tons? After looking at a variety of techniques, the Luckman designers, collaborating with Rolair Systems, Inc. of Santa Barbara, Calif, found the answer in air-film technology. Already used by Boeing to move heavy airframes about and by San Francisco's Bay Area Rapid Transit system to swing subway cars around at terminals, this new technology allows large, bulky objects to be maneuvered on so-called air bearings-thin (.031 in.), porous plastic disks. When air is forced through...
They had good reason. Only six weeks ago the Third Circuit Court of Appeals handed down an important precedent in the case of two Teamsters locals in Warren, Ohio, and Pittsburgh. The truckers had walked out in a bloody, five-week wildcat strike against Eazor Express Inc. over the dismissal of two employees. Eazor sued the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and the locals, all of which had signed a no-strike agreement, and three judges of the Third Circuit unanimously held them all liable, even though they were not involved in starting the strike. The court's message...