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Word: salomone (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Civic Arena is only 12,507. The Philadelphia Flyers have been averaging 9,000 paid admissions per game; General Manager Bud Poile beams happily: "This game has really arrived in Philadelphia. The fans have started to boo us and the refs." In St. Louis, Blues Vice President Sid Salomon III says: "We were prepared to wait three years before making any money-but we stand a good chance this first season." In Bloomington, Minn., the North Stars play their home games in a brand-new, 14,400-seat auditorium, dress in a carpeted locker room that is equipped with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hockey: Hawk on the Wing | 3/1/1968 | See Source »

...after last year's tight-money pinch. New private and public bond issues rose to a record $10.4 billion during the first half of 1967 as against $8.4 billion in the first months of the year before, in what Partner Sidney Homer of the Manhattan bond house of Salomon Brothers & Hutzler calls "an exceptional, almost hysterical stampede to the money market...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Money: Lower Interest, Maybe | 8/11/1967 | See Source »

...never been a year when so many people wanted to borrow so much money-more, in fact, than the stock and bond markets or banks seem likely to supply. "There will have to be more disappointments and cancellations," predicts Bond Analyst Sidney Homer, a partner in Manhattan's Salomon Brothers & Hutzler. "The $68.5 billion volume of proposed financing is impossibly large...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Money: Creating New Strains | 3/25/1966 | See Source »

Some of the stock market's troubles stem from a worsening shortage of investment money. Salomon Bros. & Hutzler, a leading bond-trading house, predicted that commercial banks will have $3 billion less to put into long-term credit this year than last. With a swiftness that startled even investment men, the money shortage has driven interest rates on some new bond issues to 45-year peaks, prompting investors to sell stocks in order to buy bonds. Last week $40 million of Long Island Lighting Co. bonds went on sale with a 5.13% interest return, one of the highest yields...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Wall Street: Overreacting | 3/4/1966 | See Source »

Reetchie, who has led Mr. Endikin through the time of trouble into the green pastures -- to the liturgy runs, is a lonely God with a congregation of one. Jack Salomon is quite effective as the pathetic worshiper. He is expressive and understandable as a man needing a God who ends up killing his own saviour when asked to accept part of the truth his deity has shielded him from...

Author: By Walters Kemp, | Title: Two One-Acts | 8/23/1965 | See Source »

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