Word: stakes
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...Bill Clinton must pine for the days when America had an enemy clearly identified and a cause righteous beyond doubt. Foreign policy then was so fundamental a case of us-against-them that "bipartisan consensus" actually worked. When survival was at stake, national interests, not special interests, had a fair chance to prevail...
...board at Sunbeam Corp. two years ago, the company's pugnacious CEO, Albert J. Dunlap, wanted him to think like an owner. So he insisted that Elson dig deep into his own pockets and buy $100,000 worth of Sunbeam stock. Two weeks ago, with the value of that stake fast eroding, Elson said, "You bet I looked at the company as an owner." So he and his similarly staked board mates moved fast to "Dunlap" Dunlap, sacking the job slasher whose name had become a Wall Street verb...
...recently was doing the same for outdoor-equipment company Coleman--both efforts on behalf of controlling shareholder Ronald Perelman. Levin's selection is no accident. On March 2, Perelman sold Coleman to Sunbeam in a stock swap, and he is now Sunbeam's second-largest investor, with a 13% stake. The largest is activist money manager Michael Price, who controls 17%. As a measure of how quickly Dunlap's career unraveled, Price only two weeks earlier had publicly, emphatically supported Dunlap. But he became as willing as anyone for the ax to fall...
...when Elvis Presley got everybody all shook up, when Jack Kerouac took to the road and Allen Ginsberg began to howl. In 1969, in a muddy field in New York's Catskill Mountains, more than 400,000 of their spiritual heirs gathered at the Woodstock Festival to stake their claim as a new generation and a new social and political force, complete with a language of their own--rock music...
...also accuses certain members of the committee of having "both a personal and departmental stake in opposing Berkowitz...