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...however, members of a united Europe might increase trade more with themselves than with the U.S., and a strong, viable ecu ultimately might rival the dollar as a real reserve currency. If that ever happens, Arab and other foreign governments might be tempted to sell dollars in order to invest in that odd new creature that has six parents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Europe's New Money Union | 12/18/1978 | See Source »

...much of Harvard's endowment would be lost and what would be left to invest in, if Harvard withdrew support from any of the 6,000 banks and companies doing business with South Africa...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Engelhard Name | 12/13/1978 | See Source »

...than in Europe, where religion is allied with politics and the social convention. Here, it suppresses godless ideologies. Yet another side of American nature is pragmatic and utilitarian, desiring rational justification for any act. Jones's philosophy embodied this conflict and, in a sense, mastered it. He could invest himself with religious charisma by using the traditions of American fundamentalist theology: faith healing, apocalyptic exhortations, visions of the promised land. But he could also provide his followers with a forceful rationalization: his church was an instrument of social revolution. The follower was to prove his convictions the old way--tithe...

Author: By Christopher Agee, | Title: The Wisdom That Is Woe... ...the Woe That Is Madness | 12/7/1978 | See Source »

Business leaders also complain that for social and political reasons it has become too difficult to fire redundant workers. One result is that companies with diminishing production cannot cut their costs; their profits fall, and they must borrow money, not to invest in new techniques and equipment but merely to keep the factories turning. "If a small-or medium-size enterprise runs into temporary cash problems," says De Bodinat, "chances are it will go bankrupt. But a big, dying industry can generally count on government subsidies. This is the opposite of survival of the fittest. It is maintaining dinosaurs while...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Europe's Slumping Industries | 12/4/1978 | See Source »

...released in the U.S. in the coming year. This week the A.F.O. is sponsoring a festival of Australian films, old and new, at New York's Lincoln Center. All this activity grew out of a remarkable government support program, which lets state agencies operate film commissions empowered to invest public money directly in private movie projects. A current government investment of around $10 million a year is the result of agitation by young people, mostly employed in television and unable in the 1960s to move on to feature film work because the small but active native industry had been virtually...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Up from Down Under | 12/4/1978 | See Source »

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