Word: partnered
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Chief Pierre Guillaumat, 57, a longtime De Gaulle lieutenant, E.R.A.P. will search for new oil reserves over 85,000 sq. mi. of Iranian desert and offshore tracts in the Persian Gulf. The French twist is that E.R.A.P. will operate as a contractor to Iran rather than a concession-holding partner. Instead of splitting earnings with the host country on a 25-75 basis, as most major international oil companies do, France will turn over half the oil reserves it finds to Iran, in return for rights to pump out as much as 45% of the rest at well under...
...woman." "In opera," she says, "the high-frequency voice has it. A contralto has to sing the whole night before anyone is impressed." It is just as well. Forrester is 5 ft. 9 in. and weighs 180 Ibs.; there are not many male singers who could make a believable partner. If she thought about it, she says wistfully, she could "feel slighted...
...announcing the gift last week, Architect William Hartmann, a partner in Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, one of the three firms involved in designing the civic center, revealed that Picasso's design will be executed in ever-rusting Cor-ten steel, the same material as the 31-story building. "This is not a cast that bears the thumbprint of the artist," said Hartmann. "Picasso created some thing that has to be constructed like a building." To do so will cost $300,000, a tab to be assumed by three private foundations. If all goes well, the sculpture will be installed...
...publishing photostats of Raquel's license to marry one James Wesley Welch in Clark County, Nev., on May 8, 1959. It was a minor coup. What Raquel-watchers really pine to know is whether she's currently married to Patrick Curtis, 31, her agent, business partner and steady house guest. "I neither deny nor confirm the report that we are married," said Curtis, adding darkly: "Nobody will be able to come up with a photostat of a marriage or anything like that...
...huge profits in short periods of time." Lewis Schellbach, executive vice president of Standard & Poor's, thinks that some investors are worried enough to dump their stocks. "This decline has gone so far that we really need a selling climax," he says. Said James Hart, a Lehman Bros, partner: "For the near future, the trend is down. But how far, and for how much longer, is in the realm of conjecture." Among stock watchers he would find very little disagreement about that...