Word: locally
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...States society, but offered only rhetorical affirmations as a cure--"we can build a society to man's measure--if we have the will." Gardner acknowledged that "there are things gravely wrong with our society as a problem-solving mechanism," but, except for a slight shift from federal to local government, seemed always to be urging only more and better of the same. The United States "urgently needs leaders to symbolize its values, to clarify choices, to help sift priorities, and most of all perhaps to keep hope alive," Gardner said. That may be, but the effect of Gardner...
Taxpayer A reported an income of $6,511,903. Of that amount, $4,387,834 qualified as capital gains; this cut his taxable income to $4,300,000. He deducted $465,396 for state and local taxes that he had paid and wrote off another $5,543 in medical expenses and $24,129 in miscellaneous expenses. He donated a staggering $4,080,614 to charity, mostly in property that had originally cost him far less. As a result, he owed the Government nothing...
Taxpayer B used the oil-and-gas depletion allowance to avoid taxes almost entirely on an income before special deductions of $1,110,190. First, he deducted $41,141 for contributions, local taxes and medical expenses. Then he took off $185,468 for the direct costs of his exploration and drilling. Along with other minor deductions, that left him with a taxable income of $866,022, all but $3,980 of which escaped tax liability because of his 271% oil-and-gas depletion allowance of $862,042. He paid the Government $397-as much as the bill for an unmarried...
...then Raquel started with a lot less. Daughter of a Bolivian engineer named Armand Tejada, Raquel moved to La Jolla, Calif., in 1944, when she was two. The proximity to Hollywood was not wasted on the skinny, ambitious child. At 15, she had a lead role in the local Mexican festival. After a little TV and some modeling, she decided, at 21, to make it in the movies...
Russia opened the game in 1945 by infiltrating the secret-police forces of Eastern European countries with double agents who were used to murder or blackmail local anti-Communist politicians. The CIA was not founded until 1947, but the U.S. fought back by employing the spy system of defeated Germany, directed by General Reinhard Gehlen. An aristocratic non-Nazi who had directed Eastern-front espionage for Hitler, Gehlen knew early that Germany would lose. Sensing that the cold war would soon develop, he maintained his network of agents in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. Grisly as the idea...