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...their qualms, environmentalists concede that Bush has taken several commendable steps. Among them: proposing new regulations on medical-waste disposal, requesting stiffer penalties for ocean dumpers, calling for a moratorium on offshore oil drilling in Florida and California, and helping persuade Japan not to finance construction of a Brazilian road that would encourage continued deforestation of the Amazon region...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Fishing For Leadership | 5/22/1989 | See Source »

Tsongas has a proven track record with state-level referenda, having successfully mobilized citizens behind a non-binding building moratorium on Cape Cod last year. Massachusetts will be better off if he can achieve similar success with this progressive and pragmatic funding initiative. Populist referenda can be simplistic and constricting. But in this case the end justifies the means...

Author: By Steven J.S. Glick, | Title: Staking the Claim for Education | 4/22/1989 | See Source »

What if you impose a moratorium on the number of automatic bids into the 64-team field? With the burgeoning number of conferences forming around the country (thank goodness for the Trans America Athletic Conference), it won't be long before the number of automatic bids exceeds the number of bids allowed...

Author: By M.d. Stankiewicz, | Title: A Friendly Dialogue | 3/15/1989 | See Source »

...hikes and devalue the Brazilian cruzado by 16.4% in relation to the dollar. The government will close six out of 27 ministries, and promises to fire 60,000 employees. Brazil is temporarily suspending any further debt-for- equity swaps with foreign banks and refuses to rule out a new moratorium on payments toward its $115 billion foreign debt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brazil: A Fiscal Deep Freeze | 1/30/1989 | See Source »

Until recently, East-West distrust posed the largest hurdle to an effective ban. But in 1987, two years after Congress voted to end an 18-year moratorium on the American manufacture of chemical weapons, the Soviet Union acceded to U.S. demands for on-site "challenge inspections" to enforce a treaty. Today the larger obstacle is posed by Third World nations that are reluctant to give up what is known as the "poor man's atom bomb." Poison gases, after all, are cheap and easy to manufacture. "All a terrorist needs is a milk bottle of nerve gas," says a British...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Search for a Poison Antidote | 1/16/1989 | See Source »

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