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Source: www.washingtonpost.com --- 19 days ago
Harold P. Green, 86, who drafted disloyalty charges against controversial Manhattan Project director J. Robert Oppenheimer and then resigned over the Atomic Energy Commission's handling of the case, died of congestive heart failure July 19 at the Life Care Center of Evergreen, Colo. ... Source: www.moreover.com --- 30 days ago
Oppenheimer & Co. Inc. analyst Jason Helfstein maintained his investment opinion of The analyst wrote in a research report: 'On 7/22 before the open, we expect OMC to report in-line 2Q EPS, up 15% y/y, in line with Street estimates. ... Source: www.businessweek.com --- 30 days ago
It's a well-timed move, and a time-honored tactic by market leaders in tough times. If your competitors can't afford to match you on price, why not accept a lower margin for a time and load up on market share (or force them to incur losses)? ... Source: www.bloomberg.com --- 36 days ago
... Source: www.bloomberg.com --- 7 days ago
... Source: www.pbs.org --- 13 days ago
NBR marks the passing of Michael Metz of Oppenheimer ... Source: www.huffingtonpost.com --- 31 days ago
If you haven't seen it yet, check out Lee Siegel's extremely smart piece about the New Yorker cover depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as anti-American, Osama-sympathizing radicals. It's the first piece I've seen that really gets at why the art didn't work as satire. In short, Siegel is arguing that satire works best -- or, rather works at all -- when it is lampooning a widely accepted truth. Jonathan Swift's "A Modest Proposal" magnifies, and thus satirizes, the English crown's cruel treatment of the Irish. But what truth does the New Yorker cover satirize? Siegel has a suggestion for how it could have been done right: "But if that very same New Yorker cover had been drawn in a balloon over the head of a deranged citizen -- or a ruthless political operative -- it would have appeared as plausible only in the mind of that person," Siegel writes. "The image would have come across as absurd and unjust -- a version of reality exaggerated to the point of madness." Right on. Siegel (who by the way is not the admired novelist Lee Siegel) is a very fine cultural critic who wrote the best-ever takedown of Barbara Kingsolver, for which I will always have a soft spot for him. He used to have a somewhat irrational antipathy toward the New York Times , but it is a pleasure to see him contributing such fine pieces there. ... Source: www.miamiherald.com --- 37 days ago
Author Milica Bookman's first name was misspelled in Andres Oppenheimer's column, which appeared on Page 1A Sunday. ... Source: www.iol.co.za --- 11 days ago
Bridget Oppenheimer is doing "absolutely okay" after being held at knifepoint and robbed at her La Lucia estate. ... Source: www.news24.com --- 13 days ago
Bridget Oppenheimer, the mother of DeBeers chairperson Nicky Oppenheimer, has been held up at knifepoint and robbed in her Durban home. ... Source: www.prnewswire.com --- 13 days ago
... Source: www.prnewswire.com --- 2 days ago
... Source: www.sacbee.com --- 40 days ago
Don't be fooled by the legal shenanigans surrounding Ecuador's populist President Rafael Correa's seizure of 195 companies from a Miami-based family involved in a major banking scandal in the 1990s. ... Source: www.sacbee.com --- 23 days ago
An old Latin American curse that many thought had been defeated for good inflation is making a comeback in several countries, and it may soon translate into greater poverty, and more economic and political instability. ...
Source: www.sacbee.com --- 36 days ago
MEXICO CITY For several years, this column has championed the idea that Mexico and Latin America in general could become a huge medical tourism destination for millions of Americans seeking more affordable health care, or simply wanting more personalized medical attention. ... Source: www.onlysimchas.com --- 17 days ago
Birth of Baby Girl Kayla and Nosson Oppenheimer ...
Source: www.azstarnet.com --- 44 days ago
... Source: www.azstarnet.com --- 16 days ago
Judging from the latest headlines, you might think that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's radical-leftist populism is gaining ground in Latin America, and that it will expand its influence in the region over the next few years. But, actually, the opposite may happen. ... Find more results for Oppenheimer on RSSMicro.com |
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