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Word: nettings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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TEAM DEFENSE Rushing Net Passing Total Defense G Att Yds Att Comp Yds Int TDP Att Yds P Game 1. Yale 6 218 651 110 32 409 12 6 328 1060 176.7 2. HARVARD 5 199 640 94 43 571 10 6 293 1211 242.2 3. Cornell 6 276 1061 106 43 472 11 2 382 1538 255.5 4. Brown 6 311 1169 80 28 384 7 3 391 1553 258.8 5. Columbia 6 256 909 108 42 646 8 8 364 1558 259.7 6. Princeton 6 219 978 87 35 667 5 10 306 1645 274.2 7. Penn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ivy Statistics Reveal Crimson 2nd Both in Total Offense and Defense | 11/6/1953 | See Source »

Goal for 1954. In the chemical industry, Du Pont's sales were up 8% to $440 million, while net was put at $1.21 a share, v. $1.14. Diversified Olin Industries boosted its net 23%, to $4,000,000. Mathieson Chemical, on sales of $60 million, netted $5,000,000, or 28% more than in 1952. In the steel industry, Republic was the first big company to report, and gave a hint of things to come. Its sales were up 52% (to $292 million), and net soared 172% (to $14 million), as compared with the strike-hampered third quarter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STATE OF BUSINESS: The Test of Peace | 11/2/1953 | See Source »

...industry profits bubbled higher, oil shares came to life on the stock exchange. Shell's net of $30 million was up 52% from 1952 (when one refinery was closed by a strike); Phillips Petroleum scored a 23% gain. And while the Texas Co.'s earnings were only 2% higher (at $47 million), directors considered the outlook so good that they declared an extra dividend of 40?. Railroad stocks picked up with the news that Baltimore & Ohio, with nine-month earnings up from $18 million to $21 million, was raising its dividend by 25? to $1 a share. Douglas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STATE OF BUSINESS: The Test of Peace | 11/2/1953 | See Source »

...corporations and rich families; they can be sound business practice for smaller companies or people with relatively modest fortunes. For example, a company in the top excess-profits bracket, which normally gives $500 a year to charity, can set up a $10,000 foundation this year at a net cost, after taxes, of $1,800. The return on the investment at 5% will take care of future charitable requests. But, based on scheduled tax reductions, setting up such a foundation in 1955 will cost the same company...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MANAGEMENT: The Blessings of Giving | 11/2/1953 | See Source »

...whose control (55%) was bought for only $1,000,000 twelve years ago by the Cullman family's investment trust, Tobacco & Allied Stocks, Inc. Since Cullman, his brother Howard, chairman of New York's Port Authority, and their relatives own more than 50% of the trust, their net capital gain is in excess...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: Two Men on a Horse | 11/2/1953 | See Source »

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