http://www.virtuallyvogue.com/october-vogue-magazine/

The so-called Nifty Fifty was a group of large-cap stocks which are also called growth during the 1960s and early 1970s, stocks a decision because they were the type of companies of any investor wishing to buy and never sell.
Characterized by steady growth in earnings and relatively high price / earnings ratios, but also had the advantage of brand appeal that most people had familiarity with business and their products. There was not really an official quotation of more nifty fifty years the fashionable concept of several publications and brokerage houses has developed its own lists. Most include actions such as Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, Johnson & Johnson, McDonald's, American Express, and Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing (3M), which remain important, successful companies today.
However, the fact that names like patterns simplicity, Polaroid, the Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company, Revlon and SS Kresge Corp. (after Kmart and Sears Holdings now) were typically include also indicates very well that even the bluest of blue chips the risk of being swept by new technology, changes in market tastes, competition, changes in lifestyle or simple management mistakes over a period of time measured in decades. In short, even the best stocks ultimately, are perishable and have a shelf life. It would be interesting to formulate a Nifty Fifty of higher growth stocks today and then back to forty years from now to see that they are still as highly regarded.
Although several of the Nifty Fifty stocks continue to thrive today, the concept of a Nifty Fifty group of "decision inventory" implosion in the preparation 1973-74 market out of bed. The shock, which affected these stocks particularly hard, suddenly clearly illustrates that the high price companies Nifty Fifty '/ Relations income should have been viewed, not as a badge of honor, (reflecting the widespread belief that it had bought shares worth at any price) but the fact that investors are paying a hefty premium for these stocks. This left a bitter feeling behind with investors that the term Nifty Fifty was actually declined from its use.
Aidan McNamara is associate publisher at The Deal LLC in New York, publisher of the weekly financial magazine The Deal as well as The Daily Deal and http://www.TheDeal.com He holds an MA (with distinction) in Area Studies (Eastern Europe and Russia) from the University of London, 1981 and a BA in German from the University of Manchester.
Martha A. Brozyna received a Ph.D. in history from the University of Southern California in 2005 and a BA in history and political science from Rutgers University where she graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1995.
McNamara and Brozyna are the authors of Contrarian Ripple Trading: A Low-Risk Strategy to Profiting from Short-Term Stock Trades, scheduled for publication by John Wiley & Sons in October 2007. Martha Brozyna published Gender and Sexuality in the Middle Ages: A Medieval Source Documents Reader in 2005 (McFarland & Co.)
The authors have additional information on themselves and their forthcoming book at their website http://www.ridetheripples.com
Taylor Lautner – Teen Vogue Magazine October 2009
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Vogue October 1, 1910 Cover, Canvas Print (22×30-inch) $399.00 For a fashionable stroll through the country, a woman wears an ornate blue walking suit, here accessorized with an oversize fur muff and tall embroidered hat. The illustration, by Helen Dryden, appeared on the October 1, 1910, cover of Vogue…. |
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Vogue October 1, 1910 Cover, Framed Print (14×18-inch or 26×32-inch) For a fashionable stroll through the country, a woman wears an ornate blue walking suit, here accessorized with an oversize fur muff and tall embroidered hat. The illustration, by Helen Dryden, appeared on the October 1, 1910, cover of Vogue…. |
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Vogue October 1, 1910 Cover, Unframed Print (14×18-inch or 26×32-inch) For a fashionable stroll through the country, a woman wears an ornate blue walking suit, here accessorized with an oversize fur muff and tall embroidered hat. The illustration, by Helen Dryden, appeared on the October 1, 1910, cover of Vogue…. |