Word: worked
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...biggest gainers was building. The Commerce Department estimated that new construction in July reached $5.2 billion, up 3% from June and 14% from July a year ago. Total work put in place in the first seven months of 1959 was $30.1 billion, 15% ahead of the same period last year. Outlays for new private building in July rose to $3.6 billion to push the seven-month total 16% ahead of a year ago. Biggest gains were in home building, which leveled in July at a seven-month rate 32% above last year. So great is the demand for funds...
Klaus and Reiner work in separate offices, purposely isolated at opposite ends of the sprawling (100,000 sq. ft.) factory, have no intercoms, do not consult with each other on the telephone, rarely mix socially. Yet their purposefully separated management has driven Kaynar in 16 years from a two-man shop to the world's largest manufacturer of an unlikely combination of products: self-locking aircraft nuts and women's hairclips. Last week, with sales humming on four continents at the rate of $15 million yearly, Kaynar opened a new plant in France to take advantage...
...expected to operate at a loss this year. Thomas denies that TWA is about to sell the overseas business, an industry rumor prompted by a plan to transfer to Pan American six long-range Boeing jets (cost: $40 million). Thomas has found that one 707 will do the work of three piston planes (instead of two, as originally expected), is willing to sell to Capital Airlines six Convair 880 medium-range jets, on order for TWA. The sale would relieve TWA's eccentric owner, Howard Hughes, of a $21 million bill; he would still have to raise an estimated...
...judge from the wares on the bookstore counters, anyone with a manuscript on his hands can find a publisher these days. Yet every year produces thousands of would-be writers whose work is so dreadful that even the most tolerant publishing firms will not put it in print. For these devotees of letters wait the "vanity presses," which print almost anything-at fees from the authors ranging between about $900 and $6,000. While there is nothing illegal in paying for the pleasure of seeing one's words in print, the Federal Trade Commission objects to vanity publishers...
...fascinating example of how the vanity firms work was provided by New York's Exposition Press, one of the leaders in the field, during FTC hearings two years ago. Up to a point, Exposition-which has since entered into a consent order promising to mend its ways-went through the routine of a regular publishing house. But the difference between what an editor reported to Publisher Edward Uhlan and what Uhlan wrote to the author-in persuading him that it was worth his money to have his book published-was both funny and pathetic. Items from the FTC hearings...