Word: ling
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...while two go-go girls shimmy in the foreground. The band, massed in a double row facing the audience, is a discotheque in itself. While punching out blues riffs over a pile-driving beat, the brass and saxophone players whirl their instruments around and swivel through the shing-a-ling, the funky Broadway, and other loose-jointed steps-some of their own devising. Leaders in each section use hand signals to cue the choreography...
...revenue into income-producing U.S. real estate. Moreover, the fund sells its shares only outside the U.S. to non-U.S. citizens in order to avoid supervision by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Last week the fund's realty holdings passed the $100 million mark as it bought Ling-Temco-Vought's 32-story headquarters building in downtown Dallas for $16.5 million. L.T.V. will lease the space it already occupies, and the fund will add a landlord's profits to those already generated by 33 other properties in eleven states and Puerto Rico. Though still small...
...today's rush to diversify, nothing attracts corporations more than recreation. Recent takeovers have included those by Chicago's Victor Comptometer of the company that makes Daisy BB guns, by Cleveland's "Automatic" Sprinkler Corp. of Rawlings Sporting Goods, by Ling-Temco-Vought of Wilson Sporting Goods, and by General Mills of game-making Parker Bros. Last month Fuqua Industries, a fast-growing conglomerate whose sales are above $60 million, reached far beyond its landlocked Atlanta base to buy Pacemaker Corp., a New Jersey boatbuilder with estimated sales of $25 million a year...
...sooner had TWA announced its shift than Braniff announced that it was pulling out of Wells, Rich, Greene. Reportedly, Ling-Temco-Vought, the Dallas conglomerate that took Braniff under its corporate wing last January, had long been leary of the Braniff relationship with Wells, Rich, Greene, and was pressing for just such a change...
...that current corporate rage-the conglomerate company-in disarmingly simple terms. "If you have all your eggs in one basket, you're stuck with those eggs," says Bluhdorn. "But if you've also got apples and bananas, that's something else." Following that formula, Bluhdorn, James Ling of Ling-Temco-Vought, Harold Geneen of ITT and several others have traced the tracks of such conglomerate pioneers as Litton and Textron across industry lines into movies and machinery, aircraft and auto parts, cigars, cybernetics and clothing. Along the way, the conglomerates have stirred up what the Federal Trade...