Word: tionally
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Complex as Life. Walker himself came to understand Berenson's insist -ence when he observed the lady at length while it was on loan at London's Na tional Gallery between 1951 and 1953. "This picture," he explains, "has a mysterious way of growing on you the more often you see it. To me, Ginevra is utterly fascinating, more fascinating than the Mona Lisa, a miracle of psychological insight. Only once did Leonardo attempt to convey a mood of melancholy reserve, of disillusioned detachment. One feels, to quote Yeats, that Ginevra has 'cast a cold...
Only last December, the Federal Communications Commission agreed that a merger designed to turn Interna tional Telephone & Telegraph Corp. and American Broadcasting Co. into a $2 billion telecommunications company was a good idea. Last week the FCC changed its mind. The reason for the reversal was simple: the merger is being strongly protested by the Justice Department's antitrust division - an agen cy that easily outranks the FCC in Wash ington's hierarchy. Bowing to the anti trust division's argument that the ITT-ABC merger might impede competition and open ABC public affairs pro gramming...
...through Commons. To most Britons, the measure seemed almost anticlimactic; there was little fuss over what just about everyone had long considered inevitable. Under the bill the 14 largest companies, which account for 90% of Britain's steel output, will be merged into one huge state-owned Na tional Steel Corp. Smaller companies will be left in private hands. The cost to the government will be enormous: $1.5 billion to buy out the shareholders, plus millions more to implement ambitious reorganization plans. Laborites argued that the industry, which ranks fifth in the world (after the U.S., Russia, Japan...
...least 10% less than gas-oil generation. Moreover, new, extra-high voltage power lines, such as the ones that will carry current 200 miles from Mohave to San Clemente, Calif., have made long-distance power transmission economically feasible. The choice of coal will also result in addi tional jobs and some $30 million in royalties to the Hopi and Navajo owners of the Black Mesa coal mines...
...notion how many more of Saxon's controversial branch approvals might now be subject to attack. Many bankers seemed to agree with President Jack T. Conn of the American Bankers Association, who called the ruling "wonderful." But not Saxon, who became co-chairman of the American Fletcher Na tional Bank & Trust Co. of Indianapolis after his term as comptroller expired last month. Saxon scoffed at Clark's opinion as "superficial," forecast a new wave of litigation over branching laws, criticized the way the Government had defended his position. "The original brief prepared in our office was masterly...