Word: okay
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...management, or their numerous and powerful allies, to seek reinstatement with no other purpose than to keep us from achieving our goals." For President Alfred E. Perlman, who has turned in a handsome performance at getting the Central back in the profit column, Young asked the stockholders to okay an option deal that would pay Perlman well for his efforts. Under the plan, Perlman would get options to buy 32,000 shares of Central stock at the market price last Oct. 20 (19⅞), when the deal was made. With Central now selling at 40, Perlman's option deal...
Last week the House passed a bill to do so on a retroactive basis, and the Senate is expected to okay it this week. Thus, companies that took deductions under the old provisions will have to refigure their tax bill, pay up any difference by Sept.15. Some companies had to call back their annual reports from the printer for correction, while a few plan to appeal the retroactive portion, contending that they should not be penalized because Congress and the Treasury miscalculated...
...partner and rushed out onto the floor. The caller yelled, "All right, we'll try a Texas Star, (cries of amazement and bewilderment). "What? You don't know how to do that?" (verification from the floor) "It's easy. We'll run through it without music first. Ready? Okay...
...project, opponents may go to court to try to block it. Thus, even without any action by the hostile incoming Congress, a decision on Dixon-Yates may well drag on past Feb. 15, the deadline set by AEC for final approval. If Dixon-Yates does not have a final okay by then, both sides will have to decide whether to extend the deadline or cancel the contract...
...needed for national defense, SEC Chairman Ralph E. Demmler shut him off. Said he: "This commission is not ... an appellate court to review [AEC contracts]." At week's end SEC went into overtime sessions to hurry along the hearings, and the chances seemed good that SEC would okay the stock issue. Dixon-Yates must then file for approval of its $99,915,000 loan. After that stands the biggest hurdle of all: a Democratic Congress, which has already promised to give the contract a third going-over...