Word: stockely
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...touchdown dives that ignited fans—Harvard was a winner on Friday night because of the way the game rallied the campus community. But rather than sitting back and feeling proud about a fun evening and a Crimson victory, the College should instead take stock of their success and create more like-minded events. The inclusion of non-Harvard students at (every Harvard student could bring a non-Harvard guest, free of charge) added another dynamic dimension to the event. Along with encouraging students to bring their friends or significant others from Boston schools to Harvard for the night...
...That's more or less the deal secured by Temasek, a sovereign wealth fund in Singapore, when it invested in Merrill Lynch. It dumped $4.4 billion into Merrill last December at $48 per share, but a downside protection clause meant the firm would make money even if the stock plunged to $24. It did - and then some. By late last week, Merrill traded at just over $17 a share, increasing the pressure on CEO John Thain to do a deal. Over the weekend, he sold the firm to Bank of America in an all-stock transaction worth about...
McCain, John asserts, amidst upheaval at Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch and the stock market's worst day in seven years, that "the fundamentals of our economy are strong" concedes, an hour after asserting that "the fundamentals of our economy are strong," that "the American economy is in a crisis - in a crisis!" concedes Obama didn't call Palin a "pig" while defending his ad implying Obama called Palin a "pig" confusion about Spain of declares, inaccurately, that Palin took no earmarks as govenor of Alaska regulation, after decades of opposition to, unconvincingly embraced...
...Asian stock markets posted sharp gains Sept. 19 as investors grew more confident that stepped-up government efforts to contain the damage caused by the U.S. credit crunch would be effective. Japan's benchmark Nikkei index was up 3.8%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng 9.6% and the Shanghai stock index shot up 9.5%, recovering some of the steep losses suffered earlier in the week...
...same time, Asian governments are beginning to independently take direct action to stabilize their reeling stock markets. China on Sept. 18 said it would waive government taxes on some share transactions to stimulate trading. Chinese government agencies are also trying to put a floor under the market by purchasing shares in publicly listed Chinese companies. Meanwhile, Taiwan's government indicated that a state-controlled fund would be willing to shore up Taiwan company stocks via share purchases...