Word: deficits
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Peter Richard's goal off a break with five minutes remaining in regulation cut the deficit to 10-9. Beber then robbed Schrorr on a power-play shot in front of the net and Ochoa's subsequent rebound shot hit the post. A power-play goal by Johnson tied the game with two minutes left...
...political problem with a painfully human face. Unlike the arcane theories of Star Wars or the complex calculations of the budget deficit, homelessness is no abstraction. The homeless confront urban dwellers every day: sleeping on sidewalks and park benches, begging pedestrians for loose change, huddling in doorways for shelter or meandering the streets muttering to themselves. In cities that have flourished during the Reagan years, there are more homeless today than at any time since the Great Depression...
...seemed to turn on the 1988 versions of Reagan's famous "there you go again" quip. But here the blame rests equally with both candidates, who consciously refrained from raising new issues and arguments before the more than 62 million TV viewers. Despite a barrage of questions on the deficit, Bush and Dukakis clung to the fig leaf provided by their dubious budget nostrums. The Vice President escaped serious challenge on his implausible insistence that his so-called flexible freeze of 4% budget growth can accommodate new domestic proposals like $1,000 child-care grants, special-interest tax cuts...
This campaign has had more trouble dealing with old issues that are intractable, the budget deficit being No. 1. Although Dukakis and Bush have introduced some refinements into the arguments advanced by their predecessors four years ago -- the Democrats, obviously, have avoided promising to raise everyone's taxes this time around -- there is no indication that either one of them would do anything other than the last election's winner: sign off on a bipartisan effort like Gramm-Rudman-Hollings that accomplishes essentially nothing...
...budget deficit, after all, is not the first great issue to be fudged in an election. In 1940, with Western Europe plunged into war and the rest of the globe poised to follow, the American people were faced with a choice between a pair of interventionists, F.D.R. and Wendell Willkie. But both men, dissembling their true convictions, came down the campaign homestretch as quasi-isolationists. Their waffling reflected a national division, not closed until Pearl Harbor...