Word: annually
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Once an applicant is approved for membership, he pays a $10 annual...
...them U.S.-and religious-based, are contributing actively to the relief of the Vietnamese, to the tune of millions a year. Largest of the religious agencies in scope of operation is Catholic Relief Services, a charity sponsored by the U.S. Roman Catholic hierarchy, which is funded through an annual collection taken up in every American parish and supplemented by a Thanksgiving Day clothing drive. Last year CRS dispatched cash and material gifts worth $11.5 million to South Viet Nam, where the agency supports such projects as 200 schools, 30 hospitals, 77 orphanages and ten old-folks homes. Operating independently...
...agency, Manhattan's Scali, McCabe, Sieves, Inc. To push Volvo, its only commercial account (approximate billing: $3,500,000), the ambitious, five-month-old agency is carrying on a Volkswagen-style campaign extolling Volvo's durability, high gas mileage, out-of-the-past lines and resistance to annual model changeovers. One Volvo ad pictures an all-paper car, which is pointedly described as the "logical next step" in Detroit-style auto obsolescence...
...Thyssen's present capacity of 8,500,000 tons of steel HOAG will add another 2,500,000 tons; combined annual sales may amount to $2 billion, moving the new enterprise up to third place among West German corporations, with only Volkswagen and Siemens ahead in sales. The deal, still to be approved by the Commission of the European Communities in Brussels, is to be effected by offering HOAG stockholders a total of $150 million in Thyssen shares and $25 million in cash...
...alltime high. All this came in the face of the facts that: for the third successive year, corporate profits are down; dividends have been cut by one-third of the companies reporting so far in 1967; the United Kingdom's economic growth rate lurches along at an annual 2%, and the balance-of-payments problem is far from solved. "There is no economic justification for the rise," said the Economist. One explanation for the surge is a nationwide trend toward mergers, which has reduced the number of shares on the market and generated more liquidity in search...