Word: dealers
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Edward J. King signed the bill into Law in December, amending the chapter of Massachusetts law governing illegal drugs. Under the new provision, selling any paraphernalia "intended" for use with controlled substances will land a dealer, independent craftsman, or retail manager in jail for one or five years, depending on whether the items are sold to adults or minors...
These Rooseveltian principles are under conservative attack today, and yet the traditions that began under Roosevelt are still so strong that almost every current effort to reduce Government spending on social welfare causes outcries (or occasionally hallelujahs) that ex-New Dealer Reagan is trying to dismantle the entire New Deal. Reagan denies that, but his explanation is slightly disingenuous. Though he switched parties in 1962, Reagan later explained: "I didn't desert my party. It deserted me. [Roosevelt's 1932 platform] called for a restoration of states' rights and a reduction in the national budget. You know...
...named Joseph E. Cole stepped in a year ago to rescue the afternoon Press (circ. 305,000), which had been losing $6 million a year for its previous owner, the Scripps-Howard chain. Cole says a new design and color pictures have boosted circulation. But with the morning Plain Dealer (circ. 401,000) holding a 3-to-l edge in ad linage, the Press is still in danger...
...have served in recent years as Attorney General have brought different approaches to the job: flamboyant activist (Bobby Kennedy), judicial academic (Edward Levi, chosen by Ford), slick wheeler-dealer (Nixon's-and Watergate's-John Mitchell). William French Smith, 64, is, above all, a discreet and reticent corporate lawyer, dedicated to serving his once and present client, Ronald Reagan. This conservatism, in both philosophy and style, has been the hallmark of Smith's tenure at the Justice Department...
...Historian Piriya, however, while admiring Yas' "creative copies," points out that "to make a completely creative work is something different." A Western art dealer has told Yas that his own original sculptures could be sold for $10,000 in New York City, but Yas is skeptical. "I can't afford to do my own art. It's easier to sell copies. People want to buy old things...