Word: rateness
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Stadium to professionals. Fans who have no emotional attachment to Harvard football would much rather pay about $1.50 on a Sunday (the pros generally price tickets on a sliding scale) for the same seat that costs $4-$5 on a Saturday (Harvard, like most colleges, has a uniform rate...
...sophomores on the squad are among the best Weiland has seen in several years, three of them good enough to be set as his first line. Providing great depth and ability, the rookies could be enough to bring back the title. At any rate, they are sure indication that Harvard hockey is about to get back on its feet...
...brother, Sam H. Johnson, was listed as a clerk of the Senate Democratic Conference with a salary at an annual rate of $15,633,36. The report also showed that Sens. James E. Murray D-Mont., Leverett Saltonstall R-Mass., and Ralph W. Yarborough D-Tex. had their sons working in their offices here...
...Population has grown at the rate of 2.2% annually, helped by a liberal immigration policy that has brought nearly 1,500,000 new Australians into the land since 1947 (TIME...
...Race to Invest. Foreign capital for every sort of enterprise has come in since 1954 at the rate of $225 million annually, some 85% of it from Britain and the U.S. Britain is still Australia's biggest partner, but the U.S. is coming up fast. In 1948 the U.S. had only $115 million invested in Australia; today the kitty amounts to $670 million, and the forecast is for $1 billion in U.S. capital by the end of 1960. All told, 880 U.S. firms now do business in Australia. How well they do is evident from the statistics...