Word: falcone
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...market share is off slightly to around 28% because G.M. is getting so much. Production Expert Dykstra and Ford Division Chief Lee lacocca. 37, face a vexing problem: their new intermediate-sized Fairlane is off to a fast start, but it seems to be stealing sales from the Falcon and lower-priced Galaxy. Falcon, the No. 1 compact in 1960 and 1961, is being outsold by American Motors' Rambler this year. Over at American, new President Roy Abernethy is optimistic because his sales are at a record for this time of year, although the company's market share...
...rumored compact compact, the Corvair II, will hedge its hesitation by importing the new Opel Kadett from Germany. Chrysler, not yet convinced that the market for new small cars is big enough, will stick firmly with its Simca imports. The big question: Will Cardinal cut as deeply into Falcon sales as Falcon has into standard Ford sales...
...publicity purposes," and A. P. President Benjamin McKelway was servicing a wordy personal apology to Jackie. Cause of all the hubbub: a zingy Jackie-lookalike, Stephanie Laye Javits, socialite wife of the nephew of New York's Republican Senator Jacob Javits, had been undulating at the Golden Falcon, near Pompano Beach. Shrugged Steffi: "I don't know what I can do about it; I have to be me. I've been me as long as she's been Jackie, and I don't imagine either one of us is going to change much...
Unlike Eliot's, Simon Carter's world is inately ludicrous. He is a party to a power struggle between two stock Snow characters, Edwin Leacock (the "ambitious scientist-administrator," confident of imminent success, armed for battle with "bonhomie and grin" and "four-square honesty") and his deputy Robert Falcon (old friend of Carter's, the right sort of person, arrogant, dandyish, famous soldier-explorer, with a head like a ravaged handsome Apollo"). But the struggle is not for control of a ministry or even of an industry, but for the right to guide the destinies of the London...
...novels abound in crucial incidents) is not a hasty or disastrous slip of the tongue, as it is the gruesome death of a young assistant keeper who is crushed to death by a diseased giraffe. For the Zoo's leaders, however, death has only a Snowbound political significance: Falcon, the Curator of Mammals, is directly responsible for the killing, but Leacock, the Director, decides not to mention the incident to him because in his own campaign for a "National Zoological Reserve' he must have Falcon's support, and "cannot afford the slightest appearance of vindictiveness against a man like that...