Word: hire
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Refuse to hire men or promote women "because of the preferences of coworkers, the employer, clients or customers," unless the need is obvious, as in theatrical roles...
...dance for the local Veterans of Foreign Wars. "The crowd either foxtrotted or stood around not knowing how to move," Dennis says. A month later, they appeared at a Hawthorne Youth Canteen dance, against the will of a high school classmate now at Radcliffe, who insisted the Canteen should hire any other group for $75, rather than get the Beach Boys for nothing. Two weeks afterward--July of 1962 "Surfin'" was number one in Los Angeles...
...most manufacturers, has increased its sales in two years from $5.8 to $12 million. MSL Industries of Chicago, which produces both tube fasteners and plastic injection-molded cabinets (with which it hopes to fight wood's new inroads), is spending $8,000,000 to double its capacity, will hire 300 new workers. Corning Glass, the supplier of 90% of all the basic glass "bulbs" for color tubes, recently opened a third plant in Indiana to satisfy its customers' appeals for more tubes. Such producers of rare earth as Molybdenum Corp., American Potash & Chemical and Ronson, which supply...
...signed a 13-to-18-week contract with NBC making him the first Negro to enjoy what the trade covetously calls "the Gleason treatment." Like Jackie Gleason on CBS, Davis will have control of the show's entire budget; as executive producer he will be free to hire and fire whomever he pleases, pay the sal aries, name everyone from the guest stars to the script girl...
...prove the effectiveness of its own credit card, the Bank of America earlier this year hired a comely San Francisco secretary named Ann Foley to live on it-and nothing else-for a month. Miss Foley went pretty far on the Bank-Americard: she ran up $1,728.98 in bills for the nation's largest bank, found that about the only inconveniences she suffered were having to hire cars instead of cabs, avoiding tolls and passing up soft drink machines. Now U.S. banks are busy trying to discover just how far they can go with credit cards...