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Word: steins (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Businessmen and investors are also encouraged by the Federal Reserve Board's willingness to exert pressure to push down interest rates; last week First National City Bank of New York cut its prime rate on loans to business by a quarter point, to 6.5%. Says Howard Stein, chief of the Dreyfus Corp., which has $2.5 billion in mutual funds: "The Fed is finally allowing interest rates to adjust to the needs of the economy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STOCK MARKET: The Bulls' Biggest Month in History | 2/9/1976 | See Source »

Given these cheerful signs, the January stock rally seems predictable in hindsight. But in fact, as Stein concedes, "it caught all technicians, including me, completely by surprise." At the beginning of January the expectation of the pros on Wall Street was that the traditional January buying flurry, essentially a technical correction following the tax-loss sell-offs at year's end, would be only a blip on an otherwise flat or slightly downward curve. Instead, an inexplicable renewal of optimism caused a wave of heavy buying, and the running of the bulls into the market began. As prices started...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STOCK MARKET: The Bulls' Biggest Month in History | 2/9/1976 | See Source »

...same authority. The cast is all Oriental and, in Kabuki style, uses men even in most of the women's roles. Much of the show's inaction rests with a narrator aptly called "Reciter" (Mako). Kabuki notwithstanding, this ignores the spare and intensely dramatic injunction that Gertrude Stein gave Hemingway: "Don't describe; render...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: Floating World | 1/26/1976 | See Source »

...STAN GEBLER DAVIES 328 pages. Stein...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: James in Nighttown | 12/29/1975 | See Source »

...collaborator and creator. They know in their bones--though Klosty is the only one so bold as to say so--that the gathering of artists, musicians and dancers around Cunningham in the fifties was as significant a group in the history of the arts as was Bloomsbury or Gertrude Stein's "charmed circle." After the second World War, the arts in New York took on a vitality and strength which Cunningham and his followers helped to create. And it is with this realization that a few of the fifteen delve into the complexities of the man and the myth...

Author: By Susan A. Manning, | Title: Ineluctable Modality | 12/13/1975 | See Source »

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