Word: marketed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...weather was snowy and cold; the crowd was in fine humor and distinctly pro-Kennedy. Passing Sardy's restaurant, Senator Kennedy paused to wave at the patrons through the steamy window, went on to accept the best wishes of a contingent of grocers at the California Fruit Market. In the doorway of the Sherwin-Williams paint company, he unexpectedly came upon a pretty woman in a red coat and black fur cap -his wife Jacqueline, who had just arrived from Washington to join in the opening day of his New Hampshire campaign...
Like a Corpse. The death of the News was inevitable. Though its metropolitan population hovers around a million and a half, Cleveland essentially is a noncommuter city, and therefore one with a home-delivery market. In such a market, a third paper is a luxury. As the News ran a bad last in the circulation race, advertisers passed it up to reach the wider audiences "of the Press and Plain Dealer, and frequently the 32-page News looked starved against its fat, 84-page afternoon opposition...
With another record on the way and his first movie contract already signed, 19-year-old Singer Strunk-Lauren is the solidest new prospect in the teen-age market since Fabian uttered his first gosling cries. He is also an example of how a record company can create a singer out of next to nothing. Roger was a small club performer with an instrumental group called The Buddies when RCA spotted him on the West Coast last summer and signed him. The company budgeted $50,000 to launch Rod's first disk, bombarded dealers with promotional material, emphasizing...
...show of his collection. Before stalking out of the gallery and heading back to Ireland (where he now lives), Graves scribbled a note to Selig: "I'm outraged that these fake 'Graves' paintings are getting into good collections such as yours and onto the New York market. I destroyed this...
...stock market last week continued its decline, businessmen lost some of their exuberance about the course of the economy. The new mood was not based on the potential of the world's most powerful economy, or even on its present performance. It was an inevitable part of the psychology of the U.S. boom: too much good news, like too much rich food, can produce a vague, queasy dyspepsia...