Word: stocked
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...gross lack of judgment and inability to lead people." Arnheiter now holds a minor post in San Francisco; Hardy, 32, is a lieutenant commander in Key West, Fla.; Generous, 27, is studying for a Ph.D. at Stanford in U.S. diplomacy; Belmonte, 26, is in the San Francisco stock market. There it might have ended, save for Arnheiter's barrage of letters to the Navy Department demanding a rehearing (the file is nearly three feet deep), and the powerful endorsement of his cause this month by Captain Richard G. Alexander, 45, a hot-shot line officer who will take command...
Even this flurry had no lasting negative effect on the world's stock markets. Share prices wobbled in London and slumped in Paris only to rally again; in Zurich the rebound was strong enough to lift the market 5% by week's end. On the New York Stock Exchange, after some nervous selling in the first hours of Monday's trading, a strong surge of buying sent the Dow-Jones industrial average up 15.49 points to close at 877.60, its high for the week...
When the world's monetary arrangements were revamped after World War II, the U.S. stock of gold seemed inexhaustible. Now the position is not that comfortable. After a decade of continuous balance of payments deficits, foreigners today hold some $27 billion worth of dollars, more than twice the $13 billion of gold in U.S. hands. Technically, $10 billion of that hoard is frozen as legal backing for the nation's outstanding currency. It is nonetheless available to meet foreign demand because the Federal Reserve can suspend the statutory requirement that U.S. currency be 25% backed by gold. Last...
...Marion Laboratories, Inc. "It is our right to be uncommon if we can." Uncommon is hardly the word for Kauffman's pharmaceutical firm, which was founded on poker winnings, grew by selling ground oyster shells, and has made wealthy people out of typists and maintenance men who bought stock for around 66? a share when the company was young. They have since seen their shares increase...
Optically ascetic, Rooks and Frank film Harwick's visions in full or less-than-full color, sometimes taking colors away, never bombarding the screen with panoplies of colored light; the color sequences are always unfiltered, the tones those of the film stock without distortion. Unlike Warhol and Corman who treat the drug experience in terms of warped reality, of optically twisted images and superimposed patterns of color, Rooks and Frank are more concerned with the relationship between drugged and normal perception. Harwick, on Peyote, says, "I saw a yellow circle of light . . ." and Rooks cuts to a grey sky with...