Word: published
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Christopher Lowe, a New Jersey investment adviser, pleaded guilty to grand larceny after writing a series of bad checks. That was just one of four such brushes he had with the law, which, in the eyes of the Securities and Exchange Commission, made him unfit to publish the Lowe Investment & Financial Letter. The SEC in 1981 revoked Lowe's registration as an investment adviser and went to court to stop publication of his newsletter. Undeterred, Lowe kept publishing...
...things are going, FORTUNE may soon have to publish a 500 Most Wanted list. During the past few months the news has been filled with tales of business schemes and scandals, of corporate intrigue and downright crime. The offenses make up a catalog of chicanery: cheating on Government defense contracts, check-writing fraud, bogussecurities dealing, tax dodges, insider trading and money laundering. Among the culprits: General Electric, E.F. Hutton, Bank of Boston and General Dynamics. Once powerful and respected executives, including Jake Butcher, the Tennessee banker, and Paul Thayer, the former LTV chairman, are now facing the humbling prospect...
Next they hope to work on books for Digital Press, which has offered to publish their work. But what's in store for them in the long term? Elvy takes the lead is admitting he wants to settle down eventually with the "white picket fence and dozens of kids, I want to write a book someday. I'll call it Hick from Harvard,' Hick from tobacco farm tobacco to Harvard, makes good," Langerman reacts with horror. "That's him, I don't have long-term goals. I'm 21. I figure I've got 30 years ahead expect to live...
...bought off by the University." Rondeau and UAW officials have held lunchtime talks throughout the year for workers on issues ranging from comparable worth to the rise of computers in the workplace. Later this month they will stage a musical comedy in Memorial Hall entitled "Cambridge, Cambridge" and will publish an art journal beginning this summer. This fall, the union organizer says Harvard students and workers will speak to student groups about their union drive...
...case had sharply divided the many-gabled house of publishing. On one side stood the nation's major book publishers. On the other were some of its most influential newspapers, including the New York Times, the Washington Post and the Gannett chain. Reporters and editors could be found in both camps. At issue was the media's right to publish immediately what they regard as news against an author's right to protect a soon-to-be-published manuscript...