Word: yielding
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...would cut corporate income tax rates from the present 52% to 48%, mean a saving to firms of $2.2 billion a year. Individual income rates would range from 14% to 70%, compared with the present range of 20% to 91%. Because of minor differences, the Senate version would yield taxpayers an overall annual saving of about $11.5 billion and the House version $11.2 billion. Salary withholding rates would drop from the present 18% to 14% promptly after the President signs the bill. The 14% withholding rate would mean, for example, that an employee who makes $200 a week and claims...
...yield myself completely...
Neon Phalanx. Rejecting the scientific color of the French impressionists, even the acid color of the German expressionists, Pollock explored a clattering spectrum, an American neon intensity of pigments. He used fast-drying enamels, and aluminum paint to produce higher highlights than white could yield. He hit upon the idea that the paint could be the image, not just serve as its representative. He rejected the notion that paintings should have visual climaxes that smack the eye-such as a Mona Lisa in the midst of a landscape -and instead made every square inch of his big works bear...
...yield...
Chicago's Continental Illinois National Bank, the Midwest's biggest bank (assets: $4 billion) was once known as "The Sleeping Giant of LaSalle Street" because it conservatively plowed its rich deposits into low yield securities. Today, advertising itself as "The Big Bank with the Little Bank Inside," Continental is wide awake to the potential of retail banking, allots 60% of its funds for loans, and stresses "family banking." Continental's Benzedrine was administered by Chairman David M. Kennedy, 58, who came to the bank as a bond officer in 1946, after 16 years as debt manager...