Word: product
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...readers of Indian extraction. There are newsletters for insurance companies (The Washington Insurance Newsletter), space businessmen (Space Business Daily), medical institutions (The Washington Report on the Medical Sciences), labor leaders (John Herling's Labor Letter) and women: the Insider's Newsletter, a Cowles publications (Look Magazine) product that includes sections beamed at both men and women...
...untill about four months ago, only Long Island had managed to escape this national disaster. Garden City, N.Y., bastion of decent food, boasted a chain of three hamburg stands (all of which, to boost the appeal of their product, were forced to serve their standard 1/4-pound burgers by means of model electric trains...
...drapes were pulled); nevertheless, it was quite apparent that the apartment was extremely large and well-appointed--about on the same level as a professional's apartment in New York. And it appeared that one member of the group, a young surgeon owned it himself. He was the product of a French Lycee which in itself would indicate that his family had been quite wealthy before the war. Yet there was no doubt that he too was earning a very adequate income. Another young doctor later explained that professionals were so badly needed now that the state not only paid...
SUCH petty chiseling is understandable when one considers the editors' deep commitment to their thesis. Still, one wonders whether the end product justifies their faith. For though Conquest Without War is sure to guard its readers from being "taken in" by Khrushchev, it is doubly sure to prevent them from understanding or successfully opposing the Soviet leader. But no matter. Conquest Without War will find its way into many schools and libraries. And Simon and Schuster will receive their due from this diatribe-anthology.N.S. KHRUSHCHEV...
...washday wonder of Britain is a youthful appliance maker who has convinced British housewives that his product is a knight in shining armor, ready to rescue them from drudgery-on the installment plan. "All women in England want carefree kitchens as near to the Americans' as possible," says John Bloom, 29-and he has got rich quick by giving them what they want. In just three years Bloom has captured 12% of Britain's washing-machine market by borrowing U.S. mass production methods, of showing a fine disregard for conservative British business habits and a finer knack...