Word: nettings
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Biggest Enemy. The committee did not pretend that it could chart the workings of the organizations down to the last detail. But it was convinced that its probing had uncovered in Chicago one of the main springs of the whole nationwide crime net. Its name: the Continental Press Service...
...first earnings reports of TV-makers came out last week, and showed that the 1950 boom had indeed been big. Radio Corp. of America grossed $586,393,000 on all its products, and had a net profit of $46,250,000-84% above last year. Net earnings were an alltime high of $3.10 a share, v. $1.58 in 1949. On percentage, Admiral Corp. did even better. Earnings hit a record $18,767,554, or $9.73 a share...
...General Motors Corp.'s net earnings during 1950 were $834 million, 27% more than last year and the highest profit ever reported by any corporation in the world. (G.M. also announced last week that it is now working on more than $3 billion worth of defense orders-nearly one-fourth of the dollar volume of work the Government gave it during all of World War II.') ¶Westinghouse Electric Corp.'s sales went over the one billion mark for the first time (to $1,019,923,051). Net income of $77,922,944 ($5.36 a common share...
...first period the two teams played even hockey, with he Crimson taking 17 futile shots at Eli goalie Paul Cruikshank, who was spectacular in the nets all night. Yale only shot 11 times, but scored twice, on a screoned slap shot, and a pretty passout from just behind the Crimson net. The Bulldogs added two more in the second frame, one on a rink-length solo by Hal Howe, while Harvard took only four shots at the Yale goal...
...Crimson, on the other hand, took quick advantage of the first Yale penalty: defenseman John White advanced the disk to the Eli blue line, and laced a 70-foot drive into the Bulldog net at 10:40, while Frank Kittredge of Yale was in the penalty box for high sticking...