Word: murrays
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...school board members are proud of their tough stand. Says Norman Murray, the father of seven children and a former FBI man: "I don't have a corner on the world's wisdom, but I think we were right." He plans to spend much of the money that the district makes from teacher and union fines on remedial pro grams in basic skills...
...Secretary Juanita Kreps by calling her "lass," a practice he has also abandoned. The Green Book, the Social List of Washington, maintains extraordinarily strict rules. Separated couples like White House Aide Hamilton Jordan and his wife are excised from The Green Book by the register's mistress, Jean Shaw Murray, daughter of the late Carolyn Hagner Shaw, who presided over it for 34 years. Carolyn Hagner Shaw was a subtle and funny arbiter who could savor the preposterous in Washington's manners. Once a woman addressed an urgent query to her: Could she, the woman asked, fulfill her deceased husband...
...full costs of federal regulation are difficult to determine and open to bitter dispute. One of the most widely accepted estimates has been made by Economist Murray Weidenbaum, head of the Center for the Study of American Business at Washington University. He divides the costs into two categories. The first is administrative costs, which consist of visible federal spending on regulatory agencies. These have rocketed from $745 million in 1970 to $4.8 billion this fiscal year. Large as this is, it only hints at the real burden...
After all, the Crimson defense was riddled with injuries. Marko Coric, Scott McLeod (shoulder injury), tackles Chuck Durst and Bob Murray (ankle fracture), and linebacker Bob Woolway (irregular heartbeat) all were lost by the first quarter...
...administration at the University of Chicago. "The current expansion is 3½ years old. So it's past middle age. A downturn has got to be next." Some observers feel that it would be better to have a recession sooner rather than later. Says Washington University's Murray Weidenbaum, also a member of TIME'S Board of Economists: "We've now taken the painful medicine that will both slow down inflation and the economy. The alternative was a more serious downturn after a more serious inflation in 1980. The longer you postpone the distasteful medicine...