Word: economists
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...clung ever since. Last week London's Times (circ. 221,972) broke the shackles by a simple expedient: it stopped using newsprint. Instead, the staid old daily began publishing on "mechanical" paper-the heavier, thicker (though still unglossy) paper used by such British magazines as the Economist and the Listener. The Times patiently planned the changeover in 1950, when it began to invest in its own paper company and set an ink manufacturer to developing a suitable ink for rotary presses. The new paper costs a third more than newsprint, but it will enable the Times to get more...
Wilson laid the groundwork for future economic reforms, he stated. "Collective bargaining, equalizing of funds, graduated income tax, and the Federal Reserve System, were elements of Wilson's economic policy which show that he went far beyond the merely negative policy of trying to resume competition," the leading Keynesian economist concluded...
Summers, however, in his usual hustling economic reforms, he stated. "Collective bargaining, equalizing of funds, graduated income tax, and the Federal Reserve System, were elements of Wilson's economic policy which show that he went far beyond the merely negative policy of trying to resume competition," the leading Keynesian economist concluded...
...Jackson has been appointed a Visiting Lecturer on Government for the spring term. Formerly editor of the "Economist," she has written books and articles of political affairs that are internationally famous. In addition to numerous contributions to American periodicals, she has written "The West at Bay," "Policy for the West," and "Faith and Freedom...
...must comply with the requirements of Catholic principles and at the same time must be effective from a positive scientific point of view." Winners will be chosen before July 1957 by a 16-man jury including Washington's Monsignor John O'Grady, Baltimore Sociologist William Gibbons, Oxford Economist Colin Clark...