Word: netted
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...oriented contract clothing factories employing about 20 seamstresses apiece. Paid on a piecework basis, the women often labor from 8:30 a.m. until after midnight, seven days a week, fingers darting frenetically to make ends meet. Asked why she would work at least twelve hours a day for a net income of $26 a week, one mother of five said succinctly: "You have to in Chinatown...
...tinkling hippies and mods made the sad scene, went away unloved (boy-girl ratio: 5 to 1), unstoned (200 constables prowled the premises in search of pot), and unmoved by the 15 jangling psychedelic bands. Though the flower children wilted, the duke got a large charge ($14,000 net) out of the love-in, and the duchess was pretty jolted herself. "I was away from Woburn," she said. "I thought these people were holding a flower festival...
...dollar -a nine-year high and far above the 5.50 considered normal. Deposits have been rising at an annual rate of 17% at commercial banks, setting new records for eight months running at savings banks. The nation's savings and loan associations, which were left dry by a net outflow of $1.4 billion in July 1966 because of the money crisis, last week reported a healthy $64 million increase in funds for July...
Last week NBC won the rights to Oz by reportedly paying some $3,500,000 for the next five reruns. For NBC, even that price may be a bargain. The net work hopes to gross $1,000,000 from commercials for each rerun. The cut for Judy Garland and Oz's other 1939 stars: nothing. It was not until 1960 that film contracts began to provide residuals for actors...
shot through a mosquito net...