Word: ink
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...once glamorous computer industry is in a serious skid. "This is not a slowdown," said Esther Dyson, editor of the trade journal Computer Industry Daily. "This is an old- fashioned, dog-eat-dog shake-out. Before it's over, there's going to be a lot of red ink and some casualties. It's not going to be a pretty sight." The industry is still growing, to be sure, but at a dramatically reduced rate. It will show an estimated 23% gain this year, in contrast to a 56% increase...
...battle ended last week when the GSA announced that the sculpture will be moved to an as yet undetermined location. "Public art has a public responsibility," said the GSA's Dwight Ink. "For an art program to succeed, it must take into account how an art work impacts on the people who work there and on the public...
...gather opinions (both expert and lay) on Tilted Arc. Some 180 people spoke, two-thirds pro, one- third con. Last month a GSA-appointed panel recommended, based on the hearing, that the sculpture be removed, but the final decision will be made in Washington by GSA Acting Administrator Dwight Ink. The piece's public unpopularity is not shared, or at least not publicly echoed, in the art world, where Tilted Arc has become an inflammatory issue that may greatly affect the future of public sculpture in America. Or so the defense insists...
...minimum tax alone, without any other tax reform, would have the attraction of generating additional revenue to cut the deficit. To congressional leaders who are more worried about red ink than reform, a tax increase cloaked as tax reform has great appeal. Though few will come right out and endorse a minimum tax at this stage of the budget process, congressional leaders are not + disavowing such a strategy either. "It's a live option," says Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, whose own aspirations for the White House are tied closely to his effort to slash the deficit...
...million project to refurbish Minuteman missiles. Because GE had agreed in one contract to a fixed price for part of the work, some of the added costs could not legally be passed along to the Pentagon, and the company faced possible losses. To cut down on the red ink, GE managers decided to shift the overruns to different contracts under which the Government would pay the added costs. Their method: falsifying workers' time cards without their knowledge. Investigators are still trying to determine how many people were part of the plot and how high up into the company's management...