Word: reflecting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...merit badge as a local paper, but Abe Rosenthal has at least got everybody working for one. "It's sometimes forgotten," he said last week, "that the New York Times is a paper for New Yorkers. This is a hell of a sophisticated city, and the paper should reflect it. I want to make the standards for local writing and reporting at least as high as anything else in the paper. And maybe higher...
...More Tons. With their stock cheaper and more plentiful after a split, most companies usually find themselves with more stockholders. They like this because widely scattered ownership gives more stability to the stock price and allows it to reflect the company's earnings performance more precisely, rather than to flutter at every new headline. In addition, a split gives the company a wider base on which to draw for new capital. A.T. & T. is raising $1.2 billion by giving its 2,250,000 stockholders the right to buy additional shares of its common stock at a special price. Such...
...Finnish for "a little girl's dress for Mary." It's also the trademark of an enterprise which annually sells some 20,000 dresses in this country through Cambridge-based DESIGN RESEARCH (57 Brattle). Termed "Fashion's status symbol" and "uniform of intellectuals," the dress is supposed to reflect a "sophisticated plicity." It is designed for the hand-screened cotton fabric from which it is made. (Ordinarily, a fabric is designed for a particular dress.) Marimekkos are sexy by implication rather than by cut. They belong in the never-never land between the housedress and the beach shift...
...West Coast, just about every onetime planemaker but Lockheed has dropped the old "aircraft" from its corporate title to reflect involvement in the wilder blue of aerospace. Seeking to show a more suitable face to the public, Hardware Mutual Insurance, which was founded 60 years ago by members of the Wisconsin Retail Hardware Association, recently chose to become Sentry Insurance. Standard Railway Equipment Manufacturing Co. juggled 200 names and picked Stanray Corp. when it added an aviation equipment division...
...trot in three nudes, tagged Broads 1, 2 and 3 in the script. And when the Motion Picture Association Production Code Administration refused to take the broad view and ordered some snipping Marty sounded arty, almost. "The code," he huffed to a reporter, "should be more mature and reflect modern morality and the market conditions of the picture business." Eh? "The market conditions of the picture business...