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...words potato chip (on Pringle's cans they now appear in small print easy to overlook). For good measure, the FDA slapped a similar restriction on makers of other "restructured" foods, like fish sticks made from minced fish. To P.&G.'s competitors, it is a hollow victory: Pringle's, after all, can still call itself a potato chip, sort of. And because the FDA plans to issue some other general directives on labeling in coming months, Pringle's does not have to change its label until...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MARKETING: Non-Crunch on Pringle's | 12/8/1975 | See Source »

...movements have been so violently divided that no one has been able to form a new national government to accept independence. The Organization of African Unity, under the prod of Uganda's Idi Amin, claimed that last-minute efforts had forced a coalition, but no one believed the hollow boast...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ANGOLA: Independence--But for Whom? | 11/17/1975 | See Source »

...building blocks of the team," retorted Wagner, proud of his wit. But the offensive linemen's laughter was short and hollow. The statement was more true than witty...

Author: By Amy Sacks, | Title: Harvard Readies for Brown Showdown | 11/14/1975 | See Source »

...harried housewife trying to get the phone company to correct a billing error, this is blood 'n' guts stuff. It doesn't work. The C.I.A. is doing its job in this film, and ther heroes--Redford and Max von Sydow (the completely amoral killer-as-artist)--are hollow and unconvincing. Three Days of the Condor illustrates some of the dilemmas of liberalism faced with the need for a C.I.A.--the final appeal, the deus ex machina of the film, is The New York Times. The C.I.A. comes off as sane and well-organized, in contrast to the radical, destructive individualism...

Author: By Jeff Flanders, | Title: THE SCREEN | 11/13/1975 | See Source »

...years the United States government, in the name of help to the Vietnamese people, fed money to a series of unpopular, unprincipled anticommunists who supported America's systematic destruction of their own nation. America's rhetoric looks awfully hollow now, for America's "humanitarian" aid to the Vietnamese stopped at the same time this spring as its political allies were ousted, when Vietnam was at its most chaotic and needy. It seems clear now that all that ever concerned the U.S. government was its own military, political, and economic interests and that those interests were in direct conflict with...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Reparations For Vietnam | 10/29/1975 | See Source »

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