Word: secondhand
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...jetmaker is happy about getting into the secondhand plane business, because that market is already poor. As recently as 18 months ago, demand was so strong that fully depreciated planes could often be sold for more than they cost; ancient DC-3s were bringing $140,000 v. an original cost of $85,000. But with turboprops and jets on the way, airlines lost interest in slower aircraft, and prices tumbled 40% to 60%. American Airlines, which has four DC-7s currently for sale and may have up to 25 more by July 1959, is asking...
...sick leave ("the National Elf Lark"), and before long Charlie beds down with Mariette in a field of buttercups. But it is the strawberry-sweet juice and joy of life with Pop and Ma Larkin that truly seduces Charlie. One day it is Pop piloting a real, if secondhand, Rolls-Royce into the yard and grandly announcing, "Ourn." Other times, it is Ma wolfing fish and chips and baying "Turn up the contrast!" toward the ever-playing...
Elsewhere behind the Iron Curtain, the situation is even blacker. Secondhand autos of every make, year and origin are quickly snapped up at astronomical prices, e.g., $5,000 for a tiny secondhand Renault. The price of 90,000 zlotys ($22,500 at the official rate of exchange) for a new Warszawa represents 250 weeks' work for a Pole. Hungarians, Bulgarians and Rumanians, who manufacture no cars of their own, must set their sights on imported Russian Pobedas, which cost them the equivalent of from 130 weeks' work to 750 weeks' work (in Rumania), depending on the currency...
...quite amiable in their personal relationships. The British, who built our engineering college and polytechnic institute, were very exacting in matters of personal comfort. They demanded select housing for each family, complete with new furniture. With the Soviets we put 20-odd families into five houses, and give them secondhand furniture. There have been no complaints...
...When illness hit, Ike had made only two of the speeches. The third, an appeal for support of the Administration's foreign aid program, was delivered in part by Labor Secretary James P. Mitchell, subbing for the ailing President. But the appeal, delivered well but secondhand, got snowed under in the blizzard of news about Ike's illness. In speechmaking as in policymaking, members of the President's team can take over some of his tasks, but there is only one man with the title and office, the power and prestige of President...