Word: productions
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...proprietor of the means of production . . . must always . . . remain the master of his economic decisions. It flows from that that his revenue is greater than that of his collaborators . . . The economy is not by nature an institution of the state; it is, to the contrary, the living product of the free initiative of individuals and of groups freely constituted...
...Columbia College Dean Harry J. Carman: "Any person who is a member of the Communist Party is not free to seek or disseminate the truth . .. The end product of the Communist teacher's work is Communist propaganda...
Most meteorologists believe that the weather is a product of the workings of the earth's atmospheric temperatures and pressures and its rotation. Abbot, while head of the Smithsonian Institution's -As-trophysical Observatory (1906-27) and then as the institution's secretary, got the idea that the weather on earth also reflects what is happening on the sun. Since his retirement in 1944, he has worked as a research associate in an eleventh-floor retreat in the Smithsonian's 102-year-old tower, which was reclaimed from bats and owls to give him working quarters...
...baby, Jack & Heintz Precision Industries, Inc., turned in a $2.9 million loss in 1948. President Kenneth G. Donald, onetime efficiency engineer who was brought in last year to rescue the company, reported that sales of fractional horsepower electric motors had slipped badly. He had high hopes for a new product: a gasoline motor for bicycles...
...cows eventually produce butter. The only trouble is that butter is considerably more expensive than oleo. Margarine, in turn, is normally an unpalatable white. So the butter people, who have been in business longer, have pressured in a mass of laws to keep the margarine industry from coloring its product, for they thought colored oleo could put a big hole in their business...