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Word: firm (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Plant employees carried the Kepone home with them and contaminated their families. The plant was closed in 1976, but the EPA has discovered that another firm, Allied Chemical (of which Life Sciences is a subsidiary) has been dumping Kepone in the James River in Virginia for over a decade. Fish samples taken during the '60s showed traces of Kepone, leading scientists to believe that many people have low levels of Kepone in their blood. The long-term effects of Kepone are unknown, but recent discoveries have enabled humans to rid their bodies of the substance quickly...

Author: By Andrew P. Buchsbaum, | Title: To the Ends of the Earth: The Spread of Industrial Poisons | 3/8/1978 | See Source »

...condoning of his crimes, charged Truscott, were part of a scheme by Allen & Co. to show that all was well, in order to keep the stock price high and thus make a big profit. Even more serious was the article's suggestion that Charles Allen Jr., 75, the firm's frail founder, had associations with the Mafia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: More Unpleasant Encounters | 3/6/1978 | See Source »

Going a step further, Harvard's Martin Feldstein suggests that the Government give what he euphemistically calls "youth employment scholarships to the unemployed and unskilled." Recipients would get 1,500 vouchers, which an employer could turn in to the Government in exchange for $1 each. The firm hiring and training the young person would collect one voucher per hour, thus substantially offsetting the burden of the rising minimum wage, which climbed from $2.30 to $2.65 an hour this year, and will increase to $3.35 in 1981. In the future, the vouchers might have to be worth well over $1. Says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Search for Stagflation Remedies | 3/6/1978 | See Source »

...Greene had entered a Graham Greene write-alike contest. The principal character is British Intelligence Agent Maurice Castle-a surname that pointedly suggests the guarded and lonely aspects of both the man's profession and character. The settings include the nondescript corridors and offices of "the firm," interiors of London gentlemen's clubs, a richly cluttered bookshop and the drab comforts of Castle's semidetached house in suburban Berkhamsted. It is the town where Greene himself grew up, a schoolteacher's son so bored that he played Russian roulette with his brother's revolver...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Separate Disloyalty | 3/6/1978 | See Source »

Hundley left Brooklyn to win a Bronze Star during World War II and took his law degree from Fordham in 1950. After a year with a Wall Street firm, he joined the Justice Department, later prosecuting Smith Act cases for the Internal Security Division. Of his Communist-hunting days, Hundley is rueful: "I try to skip over that period." In 1967 Hundley left for private practice, gradually building a solid six-figure income in partnership with former Justice Department Colleague Plato Cacheris. Their old boss, onetime Criminal Division Chief Henry Petersen, who was badly tarnished by Watergate, shares office space...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: In Hot Water? Call Hundley | 3/6/1978 | See Source »

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