Word: barterer
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...middle and upper classes, raised workers' compulsory monthly savings by 50%, reduced overtime pay, cut the sugar ration by a third, and curtailed practically all major industrial programs. Only military expenditures were increased, by $140 million to an estimated $1 billion, exclusive of some of the hidden barter arrangements with the Soviet bloc. Nasser also increased the price of beer (by 50 a bottle), cigarettes (50 a pack), long-distance bus and railroad fares and admission to movies...
...most of the Senators on the subcommittee think the stamps should be free. Coles pointed out last week that many sharecroppers "live entirely outside the money economy, by barter." These people cannot raise even 50 cents--the present minimum price of the stamps...
...events. Lévi-Strauss's books reflect his conviction that communication is the sine qua non of society, and that speech is only one of many ways by which society explicates itself. Music, art, ritual, myth, religion, literature, cooking, tattooing, the kinship systems founded on intermarriage, the barter of goods and services-all these, and others, can be considered languages by which society is elaborated and maintained...
...Russian banks in the West all rack up tidy annual profits, and they may soon do even better. The Communist bloc, which once operated under a primitive barter system with the West in which each nation accumulated Western currencies on its own, now has a joint International Bank for Economic Cooperation. The bank operates as a kind of Communist central bank, switches currencies among member countries in order to improve trade. The bank's delegates will soon arrive in Zurich to confer with the Wozchod bank with a view to stimulating such trade even more...
...demands of prison life, says Gilkey, frequently exposed the strict Protestant ethic as legaiism wrapped in hypocrisy. Many of his fellow prisoners were critical of the compound's fundamentalist ministers. On principle, they refused to lend their canteen cards to heavy smokers-but they would not hesitate to barter the cigarettes they got from the Red Cross for extra tins of food. Far more popular were the Roman Catholic missionaries, who generally displayed a spirit of freedom from material wants that enabled them to play a creative, neighbor-helping role in the community...