Word: sales
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Eight stores in the Square have been selling from one to four of the recently published paperback editions of Terry Southern and Mason Hoffenberg's satirical novel. Candy has been on display for an average of twelve days in each store with an estimated total sale of 4440 copies--one every 17 minutes...
...first intended to be a light bomber. Later the plane was modified for direct support of ground troops, replacing the canceled Blue Water artillery missile. Then two years ago, when the U.S. decided to scrub its Skybolt air-to-ground thermonuclear missile, which had been destined for sale to the R.A.F., TSR-2 was again modified-this time to play the role of a "hedgehopping" strategic strike and reconnaissance bomber...
...freighters will be diverted from their runs over all the oceans and seas and pulled into dry-dock for the visitors to inspect. The inspectors have quite an assignment: to help bring off the largest ship purchase in history, a deal of $200 million or more. Up for sale was almost the entire armada of that hero of the modern Greek shipping legend, Stavros Spyros Niarchos (TIME cover...
While the Communists want Western goods, they are even more interested in buying the technology that capitalism produces so well. Western businessmen, in addition to turning handsome profits on the sale of plants and processes, gain entree to the East for sales of other goods. Moreover, if Eastern Europe's drift toward capitalism continues, the Communists may be willing some day to let Western businessmen invest in the East. On the upper levels of the Hungarian government, there was talk last year of inviting Conrad Hilton in to build and manage a hotel in Budapest. Though that idea fell...
...State of the Union speech, President Johnson said that the Government "is exploring ways to increase peaceful trade with these countries." What the U.S. intends to do is: 1) permit the sale of such currently embargoed U.S. items as petrochemical plants and sophisticated metalworking machinery, 2) permit loans for up to five years, and 3) cut tariffs by treating most of the satellites as "most favored nations," as Yugoslavia and Poland are already treated. Washington economists figure that if the U.S. should decide to do all that for Russia-as more and more U.S. businessmen would like-its exports...