Word: product
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...sometimes asked why the articles in TIME are unsigned. Our usual reply is that each issue is the joint product of all the staff names listed in the adjoining column, and that we prefer the traditional anonymity followed by such English institutions as the Times of London and the Economist. But another reason is just as basic-the fact that individual TIME stories are generally the work of many hands. This week's cover story is a good example of how we go about...
...steady rise of the U.S. budget points to a milestone that cannot be far distant. Just as the nation's gross national product crossed the long-awaited half-trillion dollar mark in 1960. so the U.S. budget is headed for a less eagerly awaited pinnacle: $100 billion. If Kennedy's next three budgets increase at the same rate as Eisenhower's last three, the big day will arrive...
...product of their activity is radioactive waste that cannot be flushed or tossed away. There is low-level radioactivity, for instance, in the carcasses of laboratory mice injected with isotopes-and in the hypodermic needle that injected them, and in the laundry water that washed the laboratory coat of the technician. In 1955 the total amount of land-buried waste in the AEC's main burial grounds came to 316,000 cu. ft.; by last year that figure...
...million loss, and in 1961 the company's net losses hit $40 million in the first nine months alone. But the most staggering statistic about General Dynamics was that in its efforts to break into the commercial jet market, the company had suffered the biggest single product loss-$425 million-in the history of U.S. business...
During the last seventy years Russell's thinking has formed an indelible imprint on his times. He grew up in the Cambridge of Whitehead, Moore, Broad, Wittgenstein, Eddington, Rutherford, and Keynes, and he has always seemed a product of the intellectual vigor of Cambridge undergraduate life at the turn of the century. Those were the days before an English University education had become part of the professional class's struggle for existence, and for Whitehead and Russell, Cambridge conformed almost exactly to the Platonic ideal of education; they divided their time between mathematics and free discussion with their friends...