Word: europeanization
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...receives between $7,000 and $10,000 from the MIT administration. The orchestra travels to various parts of the U.S. and Canada at least once every academic year. And occasionally, as it did three years ago, the MIT orchestra receives a special grant from the University to make a European tour. Their concerts in Cambridge are free to all members of the University...
...prompted by several factors. Early predictions that a massive transfer of wealth to the oil-producing states would cripple the industrial world's financial and production systems have proved unfounded. Most of the newly rich producers have become big spenders, and are creating lush export markets for U.S., European and Japanese goods...
...Investment in industry fell 10% last year, and by official estimate national production rose a bare 1% (by some outside estimates it declined 1%). About 700,000 Spanish workers, or 5.4% of the labor force, are jobless. Another 8% or so have had to seek work abroad, and other European countries are now telling their "guest workers" to go home. Rising oil prices have exacerbated Spain's already unhealthy payments deficit. Pressure is mounting for a devaluation of the peseta, which would mean higher prices for imported raw materials and thus more inflation...
...through the ranks, trying out for free-lance jobs, or any of that. Martha Babcock '72 and Ronan Lefkowitz '75 are successes in their own right, having leapt from Harvard into the Boston Symphony Orchestra, but Yo Yo is beyond that--for next fall, he is contemplating a European tour...
...Polish Mime Ballet. A celebrated European company performs the comic mime The Menagerie of the Empress Phylissa, which combines ballet, mime theatre and gymnastics. One of the Loeb's special season presentations. Performances January 15 and 16 at 8 p.m. January 17 at 5 and 9 p.m., January 18 at 2:30 and 8 p.m. Rush seats...