Word: bossed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...people understand this better than Jack Straus, boss of the world's largest store and the man who appears on the cover. He was chosen as a representative of the best among U.S. retailers-and for helping bring out the best in the U.S. consumer, thereby making 1964 the most prosperous year ever and offering both the hope and expectation that 1965 will be even better...
...them. But if Lyndon Johnson means to rebuild his team, he is certainly going about it slowly and cautiously. The word last week was that the President is seeking no major Cabinet changes, at least for the present, although Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon, HEW's Boss Anthony Celebrezze, and CIA Director John McCone all may resign soon. Nor is Johnson rushing to fill the vacancy left by Bobby Kennedy, though the post may well go eventually to Nicholas Katzenbach, who is now Acting Attorney General...
East German Puppet Boss Walter Ulbricht had devised a new welcome for the Westerners. At green money-changing kiosks erected for the occasion, each visiting Berliner was dunned 75? in West German marks as the price of admission to his domain. With some 1,000,000 visitors expected during the two weeks the Wall will be open, Ulbricht stands to net $750,000 in much-needed hard currency...
...white shirt. It is no real accident that MCA's new skyscraper is black, its interior walls are white and, by decree, unadorned with pictures. MCA executives are advised against wearing sport jackets and instructed never to remove their suit coats, most of which are black, like the boss's. Wasserman has often told unwary young employees that their color-stripe ties are handsome enough but not suitable to wear to the office. MCA people should be plain-color is for actors...
...line of liqueurs and several food products, including a breakfast cereal called Maypo. Through acquisitions, the success of its products and some high-powered promotion, the company has boosted its sales from $37 million a decade ago to a record $136 million in the last fiscal year. Its boss is John G. Martin, 59, the British-born grandson of one of the original Heubleins, who owns 10% of the company (which he runs with the help of President Ralph Hart) and likes to sip Bell's twelveyear-old Scotch, another of the products that Heublein distributes...