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West Berlin could not maintain a decent standard of living without Bonn's assistance, which includes a direct annual subsidy of $500 million. As an other means of economic support, the West German government maintains 85 offices in the city, which employ 20,000 workers. Bundestag committees frequently meet there, as do caucuses of political parties. All that bothers the Soviets, who regard West Berlin as a separate political entity on East German soil. They do not object to West Berlin's cultural, economic and monetary ties to Bonn, but they insist that no West German political activity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Europe: The Search for Solutions | 4/26/1971 | See Source »

...discuss it. Post Commander Col. Alexander admitted last month that the housing conditions at Ft. Meade had been sub-standard but that they were quickly renovated. He flatly denied that Font was ever placed in an empty room with nothing to do. "I have attempted very strongly to employ him profitably," Alexander said. "If I have a lieutenant I like to get a day's work...

Author: By Leo F. J. wilking, | Title: The Thwarting of the Pentagon | 4/20/1971 | See Source »

...disarmed, and the hated Protestant police auxiliary -the notorious "B Specials"-has been disbanded. Yet Catholics claim they still have trouble getting available housing and jobs. Northern Ireland's unemployment rate is 71% of insured workers, -and most of those out of work are Catholic. The Belfast shipyards employ 10,000 workmen, and only 500 of them are Catholics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Northern Ireland: The Powder Keg | 4/5/1971 | See Source »

...resulting turbulence, aerospace sales have fallen from a high of $28.9 billion in 1968 to an estimated $23.5 billion for 1971. Although the industry remains the nation's largest manufacturing employer, it has been forced to go on an austerity program and order massive job chopping (see box, page 78). Aerospace firms now employ just over one million Americans, down more than 25% from three years ago. The total is expected to shrink by year's end to 962,000, the lowest since 1958. Boeing, the contractor for the SST, expects to "bottom out" this year in the Puget Sound...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Aerospace: The Troubled Blue Yonder | 4/5/1971 | See Source »

...Harvard was nonetheless in the first wave of universities told they were under investigation in February. When three HEW compliance investigators arrived in March, they made no mention of the issue of women. "Our concern is with affirmative action to employ Negroes where they have formerly worked," team leader J?? W?ley said at that time...

Author: By Michael E. Kinsley, | Title: HEW Buys Harvard Plan To End Biases in Hiring | 2/20/1971 | See Source »

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