Word: grams
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Such pathology cannot be explained through quick-cut cinema verite. The pro gram's power rests not in analysis but in immediacy. The footage seems to have been shot in the fly-on-the-wall manner of Film Maker Frederick Wiseman, but the editing is both jumpier and crisper than in Wiseman's works. In one se quence, the camera pans up an icicle-festooned stairwell inside a Newark tenement, enters an apartment squalid beyond words and comes to rest on an infant cooing over its bottle. No one states the obvious: that child will never have...
...instructed to collect taxes in grain and kind for their own support. ("If the people die," said an officer to me, "the land will still be Chinese. But if the soldiers starve, the Japanese will take the land.") The army had emptied the countryside of food; shipped in no gram from grain-surplus areas; ignored the need of the people to eat. The army's tax, I found, was usually equivalent to the full crop, but in some cases it was higher-and peasants were sometimes forced to sell animals, tools, furniture, for cash to make up the difference...
...droplets that fell from it onto homes, gardens and livestock were composed of trichlorophenol, an irritating but nonfatal chemical. But the overheating reactor sent the temperature of the TCP soaring above 200° C. Dioxin was formed-a substance so lethal that one hundred-millionth of a gram in a two-pound mixture would kill half the rabbits who might...
...issue figured more prominently in Jimmy Carter's presidential campaign. He promised to reorganize and reduce Big Government. But other Presidents have made similar pledges, only to end up making the bureaucracy bigger than ever. This week, however, Carter unveils a new pro gram that promises the first comprehensive reform of the civil service since it was established 95 years ago in place of the politically dominated spoils system. The program, says Carter's reorganization chief, Harrison Wellford, will "put the work ethic back into public service." Managers will be able to hire, fire and transfer personnel more...
Bergland says that he intends to "ask the Soviets to be more precise in the future about their gram requirements." He adds: "They don't always tell us exactly what their needs are." Evidently. But no major damage seems to have been done by the latest Soviet caper in the gram markets. This time the Kremlin does not stand to make as big a killing on its U.S. purchases, because they are not subsidized by the Government. The Russians will pay for their grain in cash at prices agreed to at the time of purchase. Yet their savings could...