Word: murrays
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...future to ensure that the recovery continues. At the same time, even liberals will find it hard to deny that some effort to hold down federal spending is necessary. However, some economists wonder whether Ford's challenge will have the intended impact on Capitol Hill. For instance, Republican Murray Weidenbaum, a member of TIME'S Board of Economists, finds Ford's concern with spending "well conceived," but he questions whether Congress can be made to think about overall ceilings in a budget it will not even have a chance to see on paper until next January...
HOFFA NEVER could make the distinction, Murray Kempton wrote, between mine and thine--for all his right-wing bullshit (rapists should be lined up against the wall and shot, "the sons of bitches") he's a working class rebel. George Meany and Leonard Woodcock seem to like argument and accomodation with presidents and corporate bosses. Jimmy preferred to pound people who got in his way--and men who drive trucks and work in mills like Jimmy's method better...
...leading advocates of the Austrian school are Murray Rothbard and Nobel-laureate Frederiech Hayek. They, along with their colleagues, see little if any role for the government in the economy; they oppose welfare state programs and regulations even more consistently than the Chicago conservatives...
...first, sitting for days on an exclusive by Reporter Tim Findley identifying the S.L.A. leaders by name. Findley later quit in disgust. Other energetic Examiner newcomers, hired in a drive to help restore long-lost prestige and sinking circulation (TIME, Feb. 10), have also decried that timidity. As Murray Olderman, who covered the case for the Newspaper Enterprise Association, put it: "Would the San Francisco papers have reacted in the same spirit of cooperation if a Bolivian tin heiress had been kidnaped instead of a local publisher's daughter...
...TIME Board of Economists, who gathered in Manhattan to chart the probable course of the recovery over the next year or so. It was a spirited session marked by unusually sharp arguments between conservatives and liberals, and even some quarrels on specific points between ideological allies. Republicans Murray Weidenbaum and Beryl Sprinkel insisted that the recovery could keep going through 1976 and beyond with no more stimulus than the Ford Administration now plans, which will probably include acceptance of an extension of this year's temporary tax cuts. They believe any effort to force-feed greater growth could...