Word: transported
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...their companies' print ads. Not to be outdone, J. Walter Thompson has just produced a Pan American World Airways ad with an oversize photo of President Najeeb Halaby, who seeks public support for a cut-rate youth fare that the line plans to propose to the International Air Transport Association. Since fads spread like measles on Madison Avenue, it is probable that more corporate brass will soon be peering out of advertisements. Even if it offers no other advantages, the device eliminates the expense of models' fees...
Once you have selected your night, and gotten your group together, you need only transport yourself to Symphony Hall. This is most efficiently accomplished by catching the Dudley bus at Harvard Square, getting off at the Auditorium stop, and walking four or five blocks to Symphony Hall. Of course the bus goes all the way to Symphony Hall, but it costs an extra twenty cents to ride just across the Mass Pike, and this money could be used to buy one fifth of a glass of Pops beer...
Houston businessmen are convinced that the leaders of many major corporations are so fed up with the congestion, transport snarls and high costs of New York and other Northeastern cities that they are eager to relocate. The discontented Easterners are being avidly courted by many communities, but few if any developers are spending as much doing it as those in Houston. Construction is under way. for example, on Developer Kenneth Schnitzer's $400 million Greenway Plaza office-and-apartment development, located on 127 acres about seven miles from the city's center. Some sections of the project...
What the great debate is all about is whether the U.S. supersonic transport, a sleek, needle-shaped bird programmed to fly above the weather at 21 times the speed of sound, will be a boon, as Pan American World Airways President Halaby predicts, or if, in the words of Ecology Buff Arthur Godfrey, it will be "a boom-doggie." To a growing number of critics, the latter seems likely...
...million allotment for Lockheed. The prospect of passage in the Senate's more hostile environment is far less certain when the bill comes up for debate early next month. Of Lockheed's allotment, $344.4 million represents progress payments on production of the giant C-5A military transport. The remaining $200 million is called "contingency funding" by the Pentagon and "bailout money" by Lockheed's critics. Says Wisconsin Senator William Proxmire: "I don't think it is in the public or national interest to finance Lockheed...