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...above all, if the U.S. would assure that the arms it is sending to Pakistan would be used only for defensive purposes, then the Soviet troops would be withdrawn." Most of the time Brezhnev read from a prepared text, but he broke off from time to time for more candid remarks. Said Hammer: "He felt that the accusations that the Soviets went into Afghanistan to take over the country and threaten oil routes was 'sheer nonsense.' He said that Afghanistan had always been neutral, but suddenly the Soviet Union found itself with a hostile country on its southern...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Brezhnev and the Businessman | 3/10/1980 | See Source »

...declared Jimmy Carter last week in his annual Economic Report to Congress. For a President plunging into an election year, the message was unprecedentedly candid: a 183-page catalogue of woes, pain and frustration that contained a frank admission that the nation was heading into a recession. It also made clear that Carter fully expected to be campaigning for renomination and re-election in a period in which inflation would still be hung up in double digits and unemployment would be growing. But for all the President's candor, the policy he outlined in his message...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Prudent and Responsible? | 2/11/1980 | See Source »

...American hostages in Iran." Cronkite's gesture is well meant, but network anchormen don't usually, and shouldn't, inject patriotic reminders into news coverage. In fact, when John Connally argued in a 1977 speech in Houston that the press has a duty to express "a candid bias" for the preservation of the free enterprise system, Cronkite sharply set him straight: "It is not the reporter's job to be a patriot or to presume to determine where patriotism lies. His job is to relate the facts." That's still good doctrine. Cronkite concedes that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NEWSWATCH by Thomas Griffith: Turning Off the News Spigot | 2/11/1980 | See Source »

...Fred Astaire. Bill Robinson, the old pro who tapped up and down stairs with Shirley Temple in The Little Colonel, died a while ago. But No Maps has spectacular old footage of their sequences. Chuck Green was Bubbles' protege, and the two keep in touch. Nierenberg presents one painfully candid phone call from Green in a Harlem restaurant to Bubbles at home on the West Coast. They reminisce, anxious about the dwindling state of tap, anxious about each other...

Author: By David Frankel, | Title: Animated Characters | 1/31/1980 | See Source »

...Nissan 43.9%. Honda has much to lose if the U.S., which imposes a rather modest 3% tariff on imported cars, raises higher barriers or otherwise seeks to restrain imports, as Britain, France and Italy have done over the past several years. Admits Kawashima: "I would be less than candid if I said I had felt no pressure from the U.S." That observation is in keeping with the principles of the company's founder and "supreme adviser," Soichiro Honda, 73, who was fond of expounding: "When we do business around the world, we have no choice but to stick...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: A Made-in-America Japanese Car | 1/28/1980 | See Source »

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