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...affair has started a serious debate about British accounting practices. Critics complain that laymen have been encouraged to regard accounting as an exact science, when in reality it involves frequent value judgments. Moreover, Britain lacks the equivalent of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to set rules for corporate disclosure, thus allowing management and its auditors to keep ordinary shareholders in the dark about the intricate formulas used to derive profit figures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporations: The Missing Millions | 9/14/1970 | See Source »

...WITCH, says that "the sexual revolution was hell on women. It never helped us?it just made us more available." The West Coast Redstocking Manifesto reports that "our bodies are male-occupied territory." And Laura X (she has abandoned her surname) says: "The pill is the final pollution, the exact analogue of DDT, of gadget-trapping you into functions, not organic wholes. Men have become no more human since its advent: according to many young women who have made that unenviable leap from private property to public property, they treat women worse than ever...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Who's Come a Long Way, Baby? | 8/31/1970 | See Source »

Psychoanalyst Irving Bieber of New York Medical College says that men and women are very different genetically, and points out that the exact degrees of difference have yet to be determined. Both Bieber and Fox?and Clinical Psychologist Wardell Pomeroy as well?dispute Millett's argument that the family's chief function is to perpetuate the prescribed patriarchal attitudes. "That's another one of her sweeping generalizations," says Fox. "To assume that the situation is perpetuated by male conspiracy is to ignore the genetic basis." The real issue, says Fox, "is whether male and female roles are totally flexible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Who's Come a Long Way, Baby? | 8/31/1970 | See Source »

...Latin primer, and a French primer. With this start he educated himself, taught himself English, but an English far superior to any he could have learned in school, a wild soaring English free of the dullness of grammatical conventions and "standard" usage. His is an English precise and exact, but exuberantly alive...

Author: By Charles M. Hagen, | Title: Books All About H. Hatterr | 8/18/1970 | See Source »

Takara was so adept at copying that it set some kind of Japanese record for chutzpah. Its first models were almost exact duplicates of the chairs produced by the leading U.S. manufacturer, Chicago's Emil J. Paidar Co. In fact, the parts were interchangeable. Thus, if an arm or footrest broke, Takara's distributors in the U.S. simply picked up replacements from Paidar, eliminating the need for expensive shipping or an even costlier service network...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Japan: The Great Barber-Chair Coup | 8/10/1970 | See Source »

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