Word: stuarts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...favorite tax shelters, however, remain traditional real estate ventures and oil and gas exploration. Says Stuart E. Seigel, formerly chief counsel for the IRS and now a Washington tax lawyer: "Real estate investments tend to be more economically sound and assure tax benefits with no questions asked." Someone with $200,000 to invest might use the money for a down payment on a $1 million apartment complex. He would receive the rental income from the property, plus a tax credit because of depreciation on the $1 million building. The credit could then be used to lower his regular taxable income...
...Stuart F. Winikoff Pittsburgh
...going down. Says Thomas Langenfeld of Minneapolis' Dayton Hudson chain: "Customers are responding mostly to clear-cut value and reductions. A substantial part of our sales is being achieved by cutting prices. Profits are being squeezed." Almost all the large chains are feeling the profits pinch. Industry Analyst Stuart Robbins of Paine Webber Mitchell Hutchins expects second-quarter earnings for twelve of the biggest retailers to decline by an average 25% to 30%. Last week J.C. Penney Co. announced that profits for April through June were down 69%, to a negligible $5 million on sales of $2.5 billion. Last...
...search of political dope. Cabinet officers were practically begging to be interviewed, but Wilkie and most experienced Washington hands studiously ignored them, figuring they knew less than the press did. Many reporters dutifully attended formal briefings on the platform planks, but with little enthusiasm. After a session with Stuart Eizenstat, Carter's chief domestic adviser, one reporter was left behind snoozing in his chair...
...figure, self-contained and often unfathomable. It may be that even after 3½ years in office the Carter presidency ultimately is founded on the judgment of six people: Carter and his wife Rosalynn, Attorney and Friend Charles Kirbo, Political Strategist Hamilton Jordan, Press Secretary Jody Powell and Domestic Adviser Stuart Eizenstat. There are many other influential people around the President, of course, such as Secretary of Defense Harold Brown, White House Counsel Lloyd Cutler and Pollster Patrick Caddell. But for the final balancing of major policy decisions, there is no higher or more potent tribunal than the President and those...