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...need for guidelines arises, Carter's advisers believe, because the U.S. is now experiencing a peculiar sort of inflation by momentum. Prices, in their view, are not being pulled up by excess demand (the nation's factories are at present operating at only 74% of capacity). Rather, the inflationary spiral keeps spinning because everyone expects it to. As Okun wryly puts it, "Wages and prices are going up because they have been going up." So some type of Government action is needed to break the momentum, and Carter is opposed to outright controls. Though he once talked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLICY: Another Go at Guidelines | 11/29/1976 | See Source »

...foodstuffs. Still, little was known about nutrition. Food was food, "one universal aliment," a generalized fuel for the body. The first reformers were not dietitians but moralists who seemed to harbor some squeamishness about the sensuous pleasures of eating. Believing that meat made for hot tempers and sexual excess, the Rev. Sylvester Graham urged the eating of raw fruits and vegetables, food not "compounded and complicated by culinary process." Man should eat food the way God grew it, untouched even by salt and pepper, which, Graham claimed, could cause insanity. For that reason he opposed removing the bran from wheat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Spoiling the Broth | 11/29/1976 | See Source »

Hillier's remarkable weight loss is the result not of some new dieting fad but of the oldest, surest and quickest way to get rid of excess fat: fasting. Along with others afflicted with severe obesity, he had enrolled in a pioneering fasting clinic at Cleveland's Mount Sinai Hospital. Except for a powdery mix of mainly alanine (an amino acid) and glucose that is taken with water or diet drinks, patients at the clinic eat nothing whatsoever for weeks and months at a time, starving off their pounds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Dieting by Starving | 11/22/1976 | See Source »

...Budget officials double-checked their figures and found that $2.5 billion of it was due mainly to accounting quirks That still left $9 billion in unused money and provided ammunition for Columnist Art Buchwald. Plotkin, his fictional, frazzled OMB bureaucrat, worries about how to get rid of the excess money and asks, "Have you ever tried to spend a billion dollars in two months...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE BUDGET: A $9 Billion Shortfall | 11/8/1976 | See Source »

...Sheila, but here all clues are obvious, all deductions self-evident. Ross is usually adept with actors too, but in this case, Williamson's Holmes is too wired, even for someone giving up coke, and Duvall's Watson resembles a vaudeville Englishman, all jowls and bluster. This excess is echoed in the accents of Arkin, Vanessa Redgrave (who plays the abducted actress) and Georgia Brown (Frau Freud), who sound as if they are revving up to address a bund rally. Joel Grey also appears, but so briefly that he accents nothing. The ace in this poorly shuffled deck...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Elementary Work | 11/1/1976 | See Source »

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