Word: forded
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...that sounds corny, but somehow Olden makes Piper genuine and likeable. Even pulling is knife or punching out his shrink, Olden looks more troubled and pensive than simply angry and resentful. Too young and too untouched by the Francis Ford Coppola idol maker crowd to play the latest Matt Dillon or Poster of the Week, Olden acts and acts well...
...which have grown rapidly (Oklahoma City 45,000 since 1970; Tulsa 35,000 in the same 14 years) with an influx of people--presumably alcohol fans--from the East and Midwest who came to escape unemployment and cash in on the oil boom. Soldiers at For Sill in Law ford and students at the University of Oklahoma in Norman and Oklahoma State University in Still water, might also be able to push their counties to allow one of military men's and college students' favorite activities...
...Japanese autoworker total only about $12. By contrast, the U.S. hourly cost is $23. U.S. automakers have chosen two main solutions to meet the Japanese challenge: construction abroad and automation at home. By 1990 GM expects to be building 500,000 small cars overseas for import to the U.S. Ford is constructing a plant in Mexico with Japan's Mazda, and both Ford and Chrysler are holding talks with Korean manufacturers about building more cars there. A confidential GM study, obtained by the union earlier this year, showed that the company could cut its work force...
That was the forecast of the TIME Board of Economists, which met last week to discuss the pre-election outlook. Said Board Member Alan Greenspan, who was chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Ford: "There is no evidence that we are moving toward a recession in the foreseeable future." Nor do the economists expect any upsurge in either interest rates or inflation that could hurt Ronald Reagan's campaign. Said Charles Schultze, who was President Carter's chief economic adviser: "It's virtually inconceivable that anything could happen now that would have a significant...
...mixture of pain, sympathy and gentle reproach. Mary Tyler Moore, 46, who chilled the same hearts in Ordinary People that she warmed on The Mary Tyler Moore Show, has joined the roster of celebrities (Johnny Cash, Elizabeth Taylor, Robert Mitchum, Liza Minnelli) who have checked into the Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage, Calif., for help with an alcohol problem. Moore, a diabetic since 1968, did so on the advice of doctors, who suggested that although she is not a heavy drinker she ought to halt even social drinking, which can be dangerous for diabetics. One of those concerned physicians...