Word: d-md
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Moses then dubs Rep. Mike Synar (D-Md.) a "hero" for standing up to special interests and taking Gramm-Rudman to court. This statement is ridiculous. Every special interest in Washington was begging Congress not to pass the law. Far from challenging them, Synar gave these interests just what they wanted. America needs Gramm-Rudman because it allows Congressmen to pass the buck while saving the country big bucks. The law mandates a reduction in next year's deficit to $144 billion, shrinking to zero by 1991. Cuts like this will never happen without Gramm-Rudman. Reagan will continue...
...light of this decision, what we need is for more congressmen to take a stand like our hero Mike Synar (D-Md.) who brought the ill-fated law to court. But representatives need to do more than that; they need to free themselves from the grip of the extremists in order to better represent the majority of Americans...
...Paul S. Sarbanes (D-Md.), Princeton '54, broke the bank by picking at midnight, after a day on the campaign trait. It didn't hurt, though, that the person who lined him up. The Crimson's credit manager, happens to be a high school classmate...
...Advertising Manager Guest Selector HARVARD 14-7 Colgate 21-6 Cornell 6-0 Holy Cross 28-7 Pennsylvania 28-0 Joel A. Getz '86 Credit Manager Guest Selector HARVARD 27-21 Colgate 31-14 Dartmouth 23-17 Holy Cross 31-21 Pennsylvania 28-7 Sen. Paul S. Sarbanes (D-Md.) Princeton -'54. Harvard Law '60 Guest Selector Princeton 24-17 Colgate 28-14 Dartmouth 21-14 Holy Cross 31-14 Pennsylvania 35-17 Mark Bergeron Plymouth '81 Assistant Sports Information Director Prinoeton Assistant SID. 1982-84 Guest Selector HARVARD 28-13 Colgate 38-6 Dartmouth 21-20 Holy Cross...
...small tax on blank tapes and machines." From this tax, which Vallenti now suggests be $25 a machine and 25 cents a tape--enough to produce some $57 million in 1982--would come the compensation to the studios for the losses they have incurred. Already, Senator Charles Mathias (D-Md.), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Patents and Copyrights, has introduced such legislation in Congress. On the Hill, the producers face a tough fight as their lobbyists compete with the claims of the millions of voting Betamax owners spread across the Congressional districts...