Word: stocked
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...insisted that it is "not trying to get A.T. & T.," but the investigation is giving investors quite a wringing. Since the commission announced its probe last Oct. 27, A.T. & T. stock has plunged from 66⅞ to last week's 1966 low of 52⅛, closed the week at 54. The sellers have been mostly big institutions, but the company fears that the investigation could begin to frighten off small investors as well. Already the paper loss on the stock has grown to a staggering $6.82 billion, more than double the gross national product of Ireland, and has cost...
...change appears in different ways to different people. It is visible: large numbers of students are constantly walking up and down Putnam Ave. It is financial: the rents in the area are gradually rising as the housing market grows tighter. And it is political: the vote stock of the area's local politician, Walter J. Sullivan, is diminishing steadily. Eight years ago, when Sullivan first ran for the City Council, he received more than 550 votes from his home precinct. His total has now declined to under 350. Sullivan is not lazy, and it is not inattention that accounts...
...Dean of Freshmen, Students, and the College, and Edward Everett Cauthorne, 103, the College's oldest alumnus, die in St. Andrews, Canada, and New York City. Perry Miller wins the Pulitzer Prize for history and Arthur M. Schlessinger Jr. the prize for biography. The Securities and Exchange Commission brings stock fraud charges against Thomas S. Lamont, a Fellow of the College...
...Chase Hobos. Menk is a railroader's son who began 30 years ago as a telegrapher, rose to head the Frisco line and become the most sought-after executive in the industry. He was recruited for the Burlington with a bigger job in mind: the railroad's stock is 97% owned by the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern and, in a merger that the ICC unexpectedly turned down last month, he was slated to become operating head of the three roads. With the merger outlook now cloudy, he is concentrating on bettering the Burlington. Among the measures...
...from a Civil Aeronautics Board rule that foreign lines serving the U.S. must be clearly owned by nationals of the same country. Onassis holds both Greek and Argentine citizenship (which he picked up while living in Argentina in the '20s), so he deftly transferred a majority of Olympic stock to a sister, installed relatives as the line's top officers...