Word: cures
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...bent on coddling criminals, abolishing God and undoing the U.S. political system. This week the Court begins its 175th year with even some of its best friends worried about its wide-ranging attack on social ills that are supposedly the business of Congress and state legislatures. Can the Court cure them by proscription-and survive the reaction...
Both the Swedish and Italian preparations are indeed promising for eventual cure of infertility in a small proportion of women. The Swedish extract has even been shown to restore fertility in a man who had lost it because of an operation for pituitary cancer. But there is some danger that the injections may promote the growth of ovarian cysts, and have other harmful side effects. Nobody is preparing the pituitary extract for general use. Cutter Laboratories of Berkeley, Calif., has sole rights to make and market Pergonal in the U.S., but it will take the FDA months or years...
...languages). Chairman Straus is also concentrating on eliminating Mrs. Macy's most oft-voiced complaint: not getting ordered merchandise because of faulty addresses or overenthusiastic promises of early delivery. Charge cards, which Macy's adopted only five years ago, have helped correct the first cause. To cure the second, Macy's now drills its salespeople to be realistic with customers as well as friendly...
Reluctant to Bother. The cure for the quivering pound is as plain as its cause: trade. Manufacturers claim that rising costs and shortages of skilled labor are hampering exports, but that is not the whole story. Ted Heath, President of the Board of Trade, called last week for "more aggressive salesmanship overseas, based on new manufacturing techniques and keenly competitive costs." The trouble is that when business is good at home, many small firms do not want to bother with exports. British officials, noting that Britain's share of the giant U.S. market has slipped this year, tried...
...before, drugmakers are now going out of their way to win over the public. Several companies recently joined to launch a national advertising campaign to revive the drugmakers' image, and the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association is serving up a strong prescription of publicity, in the hope that it will cure the uneasy feeling that affects the industry...