Word: reached
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...zoomed from $839 million in 1981 to $13 billion so far this year. Fees from those securities helped catapult Drexel from a second-tier investment house, ranked eleventh in 1978, to one of the three or four most powerful firms on Wall Street. Drexel's 1986 revenues will reach an estimated $6 billion, up from $4 billion last year. Milken has prospered even more stunningly. By far the most highly compensated Drexel employee, Milken, now 40, has amassed a fortune, estimated at more than $500 million. Yet Drexel's empire could fall apart rapidly if it is found that Milken...
HUPA also posted flyers around the concrete stadium and distributed leaflets bearing similar messages at a total cost of $300. "This is part of our continued campaign since the 350th celebration to reach out and touch the Harvard community and make them aware of our plight," Parenteau said...
...long history of ballroom dancing," says Button, "the British have been the most creative of ice dancers. It strikes a sensitive nerve in them." Soviets like Ludmilla Pakhomova and Aleksandr Gorshkov have also left their imprint on the form, but Torvill and Dean may be the first to reach the superstar status of such figure-skating soloists as Dorothy Hamill and Peggy Fleming. "All new skaters will in some way look like Torvill and Dean," says Button. "They are wonderfully creative. Much of what they do is unique to them...
...transplant factories that depend heavily on imported Japanese parts. Meanwhile, American auto companies have entered into new and exotic relationships with foreign producers, both in the U.S. and abroad, that can only further add to the potential auto glut. By 1990 the excess production capacity in the U.S. could reach 1 million to 2 million cars annually, or roughly 10% to 20% of projected domestic sales...
...taken two centuries -- and, now, 100 elections -- to reach the point where individual Americans were so willing to follow their own judgment politically and make their decision at the polls without regard to party," says Political Historian Horace Busby. "Such voter judgment serves notice that the parties must rely on performance rather than prejudice, habit or family tradition to hold their position in the public arena...