Word: indexed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...compile his Concordance to Euripides, Classicist James T. Allen spent 43 years arranging 250,000 index cards in a nightmare game of "philological solitaire." Had he used a computer, Allen could have done the job in twelve hours. So says Classicist James T. McDonough Jr., 27, of Philadelphia's St. Joseph's College, who uses modern electronics to analyze Greek metrics. McDonough has done as much for Homer, and as a consequence of this odd work he can almost definitely answer an old scholarly question: Did one man or many men write the Iliad...
Though the stock market is no longer as faithful a mirror of the total economy as it once was, it inevitably reflected some of the caution. While the Dow-Jones index of blue chip industrials last,week inched back toward its alltime high of 706, many of the highly speculative "glamour" or "futuristic" issues stood far below their recent giddy peaks. Some had been selling at 100 or more times earnings. For one list of ten selected glamour stocks-(see chart), the fall-off since May amounted to nearly...
...CRIMSON will also maintain its regular $13 subscription fee in New York City and vicinity. Prices remain the same for the CRIMSON's International Edition (distributed weekdays from Paris and weekly from Tokyo, Manila and Melbourne, and from New York for South America), bound volumes, microfilm edition, and Index. Rates to other countries on request...
...first time since World War II, prices in the U.S. are generally holding steady during a period of recovery. In some cases (food, specialized steel products, paper), prices are even falling-enough so that last week the Labor Department announced that the Consumer Price Index had dropped one-tenth of 1% in May. But the price line would not hold for long in the face of major wage hikes. With an eye on Detroit, President Kennedy and his economic advisers have emphasized that the Administration would look unkindly on inflationary labor settlements. And a month ago, Labor Secretary Arthur Goldberg...
...settlement the industry would consider noninflationary. The automen are dead set against a shorter work week and against putting all workers on salaries. The industry opposes continuance of the annual "improvement-factor" automatic wage increases and the escalator clause that adjusts auto wages to rises in the Consumer Price Index. Snaps Reuther: "I have made it clear that both clauses are basic...