Word: railroader
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...near Florence (pop. 30,000) and went off with the impact and power of a 2,000-lb. World War H-type RDX bomb. Its exploding charge of TNT, part of the nuclear trigger device, dug a 20-ft. crater in the backyard of the asbestos-shingle home of Railroad Conductor Walter ("Bill") Gregg, 37, cut and bruised Gregg, his wife, his three children and his niece, damaged seven buildings, killed one hen and probably vaporized a dozen more. Within minutes the curious began pouring toward the crater. Kids soon spotted jagged chunks of shiny metal, carted them home...
...explain the facts, the U.S. last week sent to Caracas a mission of top-drawer experts: Thomas C. Mann, Assistant Secretary of State for Economic Affairs; Matthew V. Carson Jr., the Texas-lawyer-turned-naval-captain, who runs the voluntary restriction program; Ernest Thompson, chairman of the powerful Texas Railroad Commission, which controls oil production in the state that produces nearly half of U.S. oil; and Willis C. Armstrong, director of the State Department's Office of International Resources. Because Canada is also affected by U.S. restrictions, Canada's Ambassador to Venezuela joined the talks. Some...
Aircraft (down 24%), auto (down 18%), oil, railroad, heavy-machine stocks took a bad licking last year as investors switched into defensive issues such as utilities, food, tobacco and finance companies. Yet, when the selling was heaviest, many a coolheaded investor decided that the news was not that bad and started buying again. Since then, the market has seesawed cautiously higher: stocks on the Dow-Jones average ranged between 438 and 451 in January; 436 and 458 in February, closed at 453.04 last week, 33.25 points above the October...
...behalf of Cyprus' hospitals were going unsold. Some 1,300 headmen and elders of Greek Cypriot villages resigned office in open refusal to cooperate with the British authorities in any way. Said one weary British businessman: "I thought passive resistance meant everyone was going to lie down on railroad tracks the way they did in India in Gandhi's day. This looks worse...
Securities and Exchange Commission staff actually is smaller now than in 1951. Progress has made some agencies obsolete. The Interstate Commerce Commission, established to protect the public from railroad monopoly, has been outmoded by the growth of competing trucks, buses and airlines. Its tight control of railroad routes and rates, which of.ten keep the railroads from cutting to compete, has a strangling effect. Many transportation experts feel that the ICC should be abolished...