Word: makeing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1950
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Time Entrance. The TV audience seemed most pleased when the stewardess served the two their lunch trays. Young, in his confusion, bit into a banana belonging to Kearns, then desperately tried to make amends by patching it messily with another banana. In the radio and TV gagwriters' vocabulary describing audience reactions to gags, a laugh is the lowest thing on the scale. Then comes the howl. After that they yell, and finally, on rare occasions, they scream. During Young's banana routine, there was no doubt that the studio audience screamed...
...sedans ready to sell, probably in the $1,100 range. Nash is spending $5,000,000 to expand its Kenosha, Wis. . plant to build bodies for the new cars, has already produced enough convertibles to stock its dealers. It has not yet made up its mind whether it will make the N.X.I. (TIME, Jan. 16), a still smaller and cheaper car that it paraded around the U.S. last winter to see if there was a market...
...hullabaloo of argument, President Truman tried to make up his mind last week whether he should sign or veto the Kerr gas bill (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS). The bill's opponents loudly damned it as the biggest raid by "special interests" since Teapot Dome. Just as warmly, the bill's backers called it indispensable for the further growth of the natural gas industry...
...country newspaper, the Farm Quarterly figured that many farmers would ask: "Can I really get away with that?" In its spring issue last week, the Quarterly assured U.S. farmers that the ad had suggested a perfectly legal way for farmers to sell their corn and have it too-and make as much as 83¢ a bushel into the bargain...
...loan at the support price, then buy all the corn he needed for feed at 65½ a bushel in the cash market. In short, by selling all of his own corn to the Government and buying in the open market what he needed for feed, the farmer could make an extra 50¢ to 80¢ on every bushel fed to his pigs and chickens...