Shopping Centers, 1959: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Select Committee on Small Business, United States Senate, Eighty-sixth Congress, First Session, on Alleged Discriminatory Practices Against Small-business Concerns in Suburban Shopping Centers. April 28 and 29, 1959, 1-2. sējumi

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Investigates allegedly discriminatory practices against small business firms with respect to acquisition and rental of shopping center space.

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188. lappuse - H is volume of food stores absorbed by mergers. Los Angeles was the prime center of such acquisitions. No major national chain made any acquisition in these states within the period studied. The relatively large food stores in this area helped to increase the total sales volume of stores taken over. Whereas 20% of the total sales volume of food stores acquired by mergers was in the Pacific states, they account for only 15% of total food stores acquired in the nation. Three geographical areas, South...
25. lappuse - If I can be of further assistance to you in this matter, please do not hesitate to call on me. Sincerely yours, CB JONES, Rear Admiral, US Navy, Chief of Legislative Affairs. Costs of nuclear propulsion in the "Enterprise...
180. lappuse - A restraint of trade involving the elimination of a competitor is to be deemed reasonable or unreasonable on the basis of matters affecting the trade itself, not on the relative cost of doing business of the persons engaged in competition. One of the great values of competition is that it encourages those who compete to reduce costs and lower prices and thus pass on the saving to the public; and the bane of monopoly is that it perpetuates high costs and uneconomic practice at the expense of the public.
144. lappuse - STATEMENT OF HAROLD 0. SMITH, JR., EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES WHOLESALE GROCERS' ASSOCIATION, INC., WASHINGTON, DC Mr.
215. lappuse - ... department store, but their number may exceed 2,000. Thus it is certainly true that the market for new shopping centers of all types has been saturated in many metropolitan areas. The shopping center developer no longer has a wide open field; he must search diligently for a region where an opportunity still remains to develop a new 'See Homer Hoyt: "Classification and Significant Characteristics of Shopping Centers," in The Appraisal Journal 1958, pp.
215. lappuse - Consequently, in estimating sales by type of store, allowance must be made for expansion in the lines of merchandise carried. 4. Zoning: Planning authorities have become more familiar with the needs of the new type of shopping centers which require commercial zoning for large tracts with great depth, as contrasted with the old strip zoning, but they have frequently imposed restrictions on the number of such centers. The owners or tenants of new shopping centers already in existence have opposed zoning...
214. lappuse - OF THE SHOPPING CENTER MARKET (By Homer Hoyt, Land Economist and Market Analyst *) When Urban Land Institute Technical Bulletin No. 12 was issued in October 1949, the construction of the new types of suburban shopping centers had barely begun, and there was a wide open field for the developer in practically every American metropolitan region. At that time the methods employed had not been tested by practical experience. In the...
216. lappuse - ... mile radius, because families shop for food several times a week, but for fashion goods only a few times a month. A community center of 150,000 to 300,000 square feet of store area, with a junior department store and variety store as the largest units, on 20 to 30 acres of land, requires for its support a population of 80,000 to 100,000. However, caution is needed in recommending centers of this type if a large regional center is planned or in operation in the vicinity, for the smaller department...
214. lappuse - Class 1 — The large regional center with a large department store. Class 2 — The center with a junior department store as the largest unit. Class 3 — The center with a variety (or 5^ to $1.00) store as largest unit. Class 4 — The center with a supermarket as the largest tenant.
121. lappuse - ... Major LONGFELLOW. They could be if in the wisdom of Congress they wanted to do it. Mr. BROOKS. If you are going to put them on the same status as officers in the Army, I mean in the same relative rank and give them the same pay, why should not you give them the same allowances? Major LONGFELLOW. It is just a question of how far you want to go. Mr. BROOKS. You do not think that transportation, as is prescribed in the act, is covered under the proposed bill, do you ? Major LONGFELLOW. I do not...

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