Word: depending
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Government share in underwriting the New Haven's commuter deficits. Two days later, in the most remarkable development of all, New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller proposed that his state government buy the nation's biggest commuter line: the Long Island Rail Road, upon which 175,000 commuters depend...
...outcome, however, will depend to a large extent on the luck of the draw. If the lower members of Harvard's team have to face the tournament's better players in early rounds, the results could be disastrous. On the other hand, if Penn and Princeton players clash in early rounds, Harvard should...
...surcharge on imports--lowered last week from 15% to 10%--has enfuriated Britain's partners in the European Free Trade Association, but has failed to improve her balance of payments. The wage and price review boards which the government proposed last week will depend on voluntary compliance, and no one pretends they can end inflation. The rise in the bank rate from 5% to 7% has helped to keep capital inside Britain, but has also inhibited investment. And the program of increased government spending, designed to stimulate the economy, must be followed by broader measures...
Although Vaughn will not have Tom Mann's personal pipeline to the White House as a special assistant to Johnson, he is taking an aggressive and eager approach to his job. He may depend less on a massive infusion of dollars to solve Latin-American problems. "Man does not live by G.N.P. alone," he says. "After looking at the results of our foreign aid program around the world and seeing how few attitudes have been changed and how little it has to do with better government, self-respect and social change, I feel there are several missing ingredients." Among...
Precisely because the program is vague and voluntary, its success will depend primarily upon how businessmen react to it. Such industrialists as G.M.'s Donner and RCA's David Sarnoff pointed out that their companies already have favorable trade balances, thus implying that the President could expect little more from them. A number of bankers echoed the criticism made by European financial leaders that Johnson had attacked the symptoms rather than the basic causes of the deficit. They pointed out that, in a rush to beat the voluntary controls, U.S. banks have probably already exceeded...