Word: sharing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...even without these two the Crimson varsity got its share of the Sunday headlines, hanks to an incredible strongman effort by Aggrey Awori. Running a total of five races against Olympic-calibre competition, the senior from Uganda took fourth places in the hurdles, dash, and broad jump...
...EGYPT has received the lion's share ($835 million) of Moscow's Mideast aid largely because of the showcase Aswan Dam, estimated to cost ultimately $1 billion, of which the Soviets are putting up nearly 30%. Aswan is the world's most striking aid project, and the Russians are breaking their backs to do the job right and on time, and are largely succeeding-even at the expense of Siberian dam projects, delayed because Russia's top engineering talent is in Egypt. The Russians are also expanding the Helwan steel complex and the Suez refinery...
...Arab; only rent him." As a result, the Russians are becoming more selective in their aid, smarter in getting more for their money. In Iran they are collaborating in sensible, largely unpolitical, neighborly ventures: planning dams on their common border, stocking the Caspian Sea, which the two countries share, with sturgeon to keep the caviar flowing. In Turkey, too, they have proposed a joint border hydroelectric project. But for all their frustrations in the southern Arab nations, the Soviets have nonetheless succeeded in creating a Russian presence and influence where it never existed before-as well as in arming Arabs...
...Ford Foundation last year handed out money at the rate of $4,600,000 a week, most of it to schools and scholars, for a total of $241,544,000. Income from its investment portfolio, which includes 46,284,000 shares of Ford Motor Co. stock and shares of 126 other corporations, was a glaring $94,601,000 less than outgo. But no matter how much it spends, the Ford Foundation can't get poorer. Cautiously raising the book value of its Ford stock from $30 to $33 per share, still well below the market value, the Foundation reported...
...Shared Plant. But the Government refused to give up. It brought suit, not to block the merger but to undo it. And strangely, the heart of the trustbusters' argument was not so much the present merger but a 24-year-old agreement between the two papers to share a printing plant and an advertising staff-a clear violation, the Government claimed, of the restraint-of-trade and antimonopoly sections of the Sherman...