Word: profits
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Impending expulsion from Phillips Brooks House, its last possible location for local rehearsals, convinced the University Children's Theatre yesterday to become a non-profit organization...
Emily B. Lacey '49, Radcliffe Dean of Residence, immediately granted the group rent-free use of Agassiz again, on condition that it remain non-profit for its current production...
...businessmen at the conference thought that the Atomic Age had already arrived. Everyone agreed that it might be years before research on nuclear projects showed up on profit sheets. But the prospects are dazzling. Before the businessmen, Gordon Molesworth, an atomic energy consultant for a Manhattan brokerage firm, laid out the requirements for power plants alone during the next 20 years. Said he: By 1975 atomic power plants will be producing 100 million kw. annually, some 25% of the U.S. total. To build them, U.S. industry will need a capital of at least $40 billion. Added Molesworth: "Beyond that...
...models, the auto industry has not only kept pace with booming sales, but built a backlog of some 600,000 cars, enough to last the dealers five weeks. Moreover, a cutback in production would end the fat discounts auto buyers are now getting, thereby restore the dealers' normal profit on each...
...Strike. Last week, despite the strike, a steady stream of artillery shells, precision instruments, pink washbasins and peach bathtubs flowed off the Kohler assembly lines. The company hinted that it had 3,000 men at work, as against 3,300 before the walkout, said it was operating at a profit. The union conceded that Kohler had 1,800 employees at work, but claimed that 2,800 of the 2,850 U.A.W. members who walked out last year were still holding out. The strike had already cost the union some $4,000,000 in benefits-$25 weekly to each striker...