Word: ecksteins
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Treasurer Eliot T. Kieval '84 then moved to adopt co-chairs and nominated Felicia Eckstein '84 of Eliot House for the post. Just minutes after the secret ballot vote, Cohen found himself being joined at the committee's helm by Eskstein...
...TeaseDunster House: Jake Stevens Bentley TolkMichael Heller North House: North YardGary Ivens Catherina Celosse Bill BerkmanDebby Landau Paul Choi Baltasar D. CruzJ. Russell Schmeidel Roland Dunbrack Stephen DavisDavid Traum Dave Finn Susan HendricksonEliot House: Greg Lyss Julie SchragerJohn Coburn Quincy House: Southeast Yard:Tom Cronin Ben Broder Pam DoughmanFelicia Eckstein Ethan Cohon Buddy FletcherScott Falk Sarah Glimp Ki IngersolMichael Okwu Sesha Paratap Brian C. OffuttKirkland House: Warren Shlomchik Ray VasvariMark Eichorn Doug Winthrop Southwest Yard:Angela Ferry Paul BokotaAlison Harrington Maureen BroeMartin J.Herman Tara DealRebecca Rozen Mitchell Elkind Luke Fleckenstei
...French franc, 53% against the West German mark and 50% against the British pound. Now America's currency is about 25% too strong for its own good, according to such experts as C. Fred Bergsten, director of the Institute for International Economics in Washington, and Otto Eckstein, chairman of Massachusetts-based Data Resources...
Economists are divided over the future course of the U.S. currency. Most insist that the dollar is unlikely to fall much any time soon. Data Resources' Eckstein expects the dollar to drop at an annual rate of 3% to 4% over the next several years. "Those are small changes," he says. But a few economists predict that the U.S. currency could fall just as rapidly as it has risen. Stephen Maris, former chief economic adviser to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development in Paris, warns that when the dollar does drop, it may come crashing down. He believes...
...imbalanced recovery may be worse than a new recession because the damage will be corrosive rather than acute. "Things may not get bad enough," said Schultze, "to force us to make them better." The vitality in some parts of the economy may overshadow the sickness in others. Warned Eckstein: "We could sail through the 1980s-and gradually wreck our economy." Thus while everything on the surface looks fine, a danger lurks in the deep. -By Charles P. Alexander