Word: productive
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...selling of cars in 1955. "I think there was a coinciding then of two factors," he said. "The economic boom coincided with a freshness and newness of car models not seen for a long time. You had the panorama windshield and other improvements. The dealers got excited about the product. In their excitement they may have overtraded. But the fundamental fact was the business excitement...
...cars changing, with more interest in low-cost transportation than in the appearance of the car? Such theories, said Donner, "were just rationalizations for not 'buying a car. Lots of this sort of attitude would change overnight if economic conditions change, especially if we have a fresh new product-and speaking for G.M., we are going to have a fresh new product...
Donner admits he does not fully understand the reasons for the small-car vogue, but he is in no rush to order basic changes in G.M.'s product line. "I don't know for sure what it^ means, but I can tell you this-before we move at G.M., we will be sure. What would you do if you were Chevrolet and had the responsibility for selling a million and a half cars a year...
...those sumptuous affairs the romantics of old would have called a "typical Italian villa." Internally it is unique. Berenson has also observed that a house can be "part of one's raiment, the outerrost garment. ..." It is a perfect description of I Tatti, an instrument for and product of the pursuit of what B.B. calls "IT". "IT", he explains, "comes to mean taking life ritually as something holy, of mystical import and in one's thought ideatedly--if not in realizable actuality as a sacred performance. From childhood I have had the dream of life lived as a sacrament. With...
Last week Billie was home building a new chickee (hut) with a bathroom on Upjohn's money, and Upjohn was analyzing the tea's ingredients. It will be months before Upjohn feels able to announce its findings, at least two years before a new product could reach drugstores. Billie's tea, notes one researcher, contains "gunk" that needs thorough investigation. But Upjohn considers the" project highly worthwhile. Very useful drugs have been found before in unorthodox fashion, e.g., reserpine, the ancient tranquilizer made from India's Rauwolfia plant, which became an antihypertensive drug. A favorable outcome...