Word: yardsticks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...little speech, Correspondent Hugh Hessell Tiltman of the London Daily Herald was brutally frank. "I must sound a warning to you Japanese," he told the Nagoya Chamber of Commerce. "The only yardstick by which you measure world reaction towards yourselves is the extremely friendly attitude of the occupation personnel, but there are other places in the world where people are by no means inclined to forget so soon what has happened. I've just come back from Malaya and I must say it'll be some time before Japanese can safely do business there...
...been pre-testing movie titles, scripts and casts for Hollywood producers, can now predict for nervous movie magnates the final box-office draw within 3%. Last fall a similar setup was organized to measure the pulling power of radio stars (top draw in both by the Gallup yardstick: Bing Crosby). The full Gallup empire takes an annual operating budget of around $750,000 a year, maintains offices in Princeton, Manhattan and Los Angeles, requires a staff of 1,200 part-time interviewers for the Gallup Poll alone...
This game should be an accurate yardstick for things to come. The Terriers have one of the strongest teams in New England, and in a previous fray with the Crimson set them down 8 to 2. Their attack is dazzingly fast, but even in the last Harvard game they only outplayed the Crimson for one period, so the conclusion about tonight is by no means foregone. And if the Crimson can down B.U., they ought to be able to do the same for almost anyone else on the agenda, with the possible exception of Dartmouth...
...believe that farm prices could be rolled back, and wages "stabilized"? He was not talking about what was politically expedient or even politically practical, but what he thought ought to be done. "We must stop inflation not to save Europe but to save America," he said. He offered this yardstick to measure any anti-inflation plan: "Let the public ask-whom does it hit? If it hits everyone, more than likely it will be a good program. If it taps here and there, touching one segment while exempting others, it will be a bad program...
...this was not the only yardstick. The demand for food was still on the rise, but the demand for many another item was already going down. Example: the dollar value of all retail sales was $109 billion, up 13% over 1946. But the unit volume, i.e., the number of items sold, went down an estimated 10% during 1947. Part of the drop was due to the increase in production, which tended to satisfy demand, and part to the rise in prices. In a free economy, prices can also be a cure for inflation-if a harsh one. As London...