Word: wall
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...conventioneering Jaycee as he bounced from coast to coast in a spurt of razzle-dazzle campaigning. He rode a motorized ricksha and a cable car in San Francisco, a trolley in St. Louis, a stern-wheeler on the Ohio near Louisville, and a pea-green convertible in Wall Street. He still was not riding any bandwagon, but in Miami, at least, he got a surprise present: an endorsement from Florida Governor Claude Kirk-the first Southern Governor to support him to date. Then, Pennsylvania's influential former Governor Wil liam Scranton added his praise, calling Rocky "the only Republican...
Though their placards and protests disappeared with June's diplomas, student radicals have hardly let the summertime lull slow their efforts to keep U.S. universities up against the wall. In Chicago, young faculty members and graduate students have founded a New University Conference, postgraduate big brother of the Students for a Democratic Society...
Though last week's hearings barely scratched the surface of Wall Street's rate structure, broker witnesses shed some light on how much give ups cost them. Van Vechten Burger, managing partner of Manhattan's Pershing & Co., testified that his firm routinely handles stock orders from mutual funds for only 25% of the fee set by the Big Board, passes on 75% to other exchange members. Last year, he said, Pershing thus surrendered some $6.9 million of its $9.7 million take from mutual-fund and other institutional trading. Michael J. Heaney, a floor partner at the American...
...total brought Gookin closer to his heart's desire of a billion-dollar 1972 sales year for Heinz. More significantly, earnings were up 17%, to $25,274,000; of that total, 43% came from the domestic side of Heinz's operation. Wall Street liked the flavor; Heinz stock that was selling in the 20s two years ago was up last week to almost...
Servan-Schreiber, at 44 the editor-publisher of the successful weekly newsmagazine L'Express, is more American than French in the manner of his criticism. Deadly serious, he says flatly that "our back is to the wall" and warns that France and other European countries will fall disastrously behind America if they do not learn its methods quickly...