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...Missouri. The attitude involved money only indirectly. Money seemed but a natural consequence of a way of life that called out, as did Paul Laxalt on Wednesday night, for "growth, growth and more growth." The pessimism of the Democrats, which Vice President Bush decried, that was not for Dallas. Caution, timidity, they were not for Dallas. Why, don't people say that Trammell Crow, the warehouse king, added a $160 million wing to the Loews Anatole Hotel just to get Reagan to stay there? And didn't Reagan exult upon arriving, "I've always felt I carried...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tell Me, What Was It Like? | 9/3/1984 | See Source »

...almost word for word. "There are no plans for tax increases in 1985," he said. Yet he declined to venture an opinion about 1986 or beyond: "That's the trouble George Bush got in the other day." Nonetheless, in a television interview a day later, Regan tossed away caution. Said he: "We have no plans now for increases in 1986,1987,1988. Would you like to try for 2000?" Regan predicted that the gross national product will grow at a rate of 7.2% this year, while unemployment will drop to 6.8% and inflation will be at just...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Scoring Points with Candor | 8/20/1984 | See Source »

...argument among investors and market watchers is whether they are witnessing just a brief spurt or a true second leg on the bull market that would take the averages even higher. John Paulus, the chief economist for Morgan Stanley, the investment banking house, had a note of caution. Said he: "The economy still has a good deal of upward momentum, which will have to be moderated by rising interest rates at some point. The gross national product rose 8.8% in the first half of the year and is now moving ahead at between 4% and 5%. That is still...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Those Roaring Bulls | 8/13/1984 | See Source »

...players are the world's most populous nation, China, and that most weathered of empire builders, Britain. In the kitty is a gleaming pearl, the scintillant colony of Hong Kong, which London is due to return to Peking in 1997. The favored strategy so far has been caution. Through 19 rounds of official bidding and bluffing, the British have remained outwardly imperturbable, while the Chinese have countered with a variety of shrewd hands...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hong Kong: Making a Deal for 1997 | 8/13/1984 | See Source »

...public opinion survey [in 1964] asked the question 'What should we do next in Vietnam?' and 70 percent of the answers were. 'We're not paying attention to it'." Karnow recalled. "Today the opinion polls show far greater interest on the part of the public and much greater caution about involvement, not only in Vietnam, but in other places...

Author: By Michael W. Hirschorn, | Title: Taking History Case by Case | 8/3/1984 | See Source »

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