Word: worth
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Indeed, De Sapio had been making approving sounds about Hogan ever since March. Among his main reasons: Hogan is far from being one of the A.D.A.-type liberals who, De Sapio thinks, have long been getting more political plums than their vote production is worth. And, as opposed to a liberal darling, a Hogan on the next New York delegation to a national convention would make it easier for De Sapio to deal with Southerners for whatever...
...tubby, homely little bathyscaphe Trieste, launched by Auguste Piccard and his son Jacques in 1953. Last summer the Navy rented the craft for research dives off Capri, recently bought it from the Piccards for $200,000. A new one would have cost $1,500,000-and have been worth every cent...
...trade with, a few minor concessions for its reluctantly abandoned scholarship provision. The U.S. needs more federal aid to education than the compromise bill will give-for example, aid to school construction, not seriously considered this session-but by week's end the President had a measure worth signing. Provisions...
...Japan's biggest customer, the U.S. bought $600 million worth of Japanese goods last year, largely because Japanese cameras, textiles, machinery and electrical goods are among the world's least expensive. Last week many a Japanese businessman was looking in the other direction: toward higher-priced, quality products fitted to compete with the world's best. They argue that Japan actually damages its potential U.S. markets with cheap, often shoddy goods copycatted from U.S. or other foreign manufacturers. To U.S. consumers, the label "Made in Japan" frequently acts as a red light that warns of inferior goods...
...stable price and uniform quality for its exports by policing Japanese industry, encouraging manufacturers to design their own products. The idea is already showing results, though there are plenty of problems. The best Japanese transistor radios compete on even terms with RCA's-and $4,300,000 worth of them poured into U.S. markets in 1958's first six months. The one trouble is that so many fly-by-night Japanese companies are trying to hop aboard the gravy train that the Japanese Trade Ministry has been forced to lay down a check price of $14.95 for exports...