Word: expect
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...discounting and boosting volume than by insisting oh full price. One Atlanta Ford dealer, who averaged 125 sales a month last year, is now selling at the rate of 175 cars a month. Half of the cars are selling at profits of only $100 to $200 each. He expects to boost his volume to 250 a month by March. Said a Southern Buick dealer, who offers a $300 discount on the Special: "For profit and volume, business is the best it's been since the Korean war." If Ford and Chrysler follow G.M.'s lead to curb bootlegging...
...corporations themselves, the scramble is no joke. Says John D. Wright, president of Cleveland's Thompson Products, Inc.: "This involves a problem of morale, and often the little privileges that go with an office are more important to an executive than a raise. You'd expect executives to be more mature, but they frequently aren't." Wright himself ran into real trouble on how to list the names on round-robin office memos until he finally decided to list them alphabetically. Since this put Wright's name at the bottom, everybody was happy...
...expect that none of these arguments will persuade Mr. Philbrick especially that the clergy support of the question. According to Mr. Philbrick, not long ago there are six, seven, or eight Communist clergymen in the Boston area. After making these charges in "secret" testimony-- it was headline news the next day--Philbrick went on to point out that he had no "legal" evidence, a point which the papers didn't find much use for. These people turned out to be such names as the Rev. Joseph Fletcher of the Episcopal Theological Seminary, the Rev. Kenneth DePew Hughes of St. Bartholomew...
Statehood. The President promised that Alaska should expect to achieve statehood when its "complex problems" are solved, but reiterated his belief that "there is no justification for deferring the admission to statehood of Hawaii...
...President Eisenhower, the popular military leader, from President Eisenhower, the civil and political leader. The former they will let alone. They hope, through remorseless analysis as issues and occasions arise, to show that the limitations of the latter disqualify him for a second term. Their strategy implies that they expect him to run again. Sincere Democrats believe that the President is the major and almost indeed the only political asset of the Republican Party...