Word: nationalizes
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...first of our Nation stories is devoted to the President's three presentations and their impact on people as diverse as Senator Robert Byrd and Philadelphia Personnel Manager June Rosato. It is by Senior Writer Ed Magnuson, who has written 67 TIME covers. Said he after reading the extensive files from our correspondents: "All those off-the-cuff views that most people will not rise to a crisis unless they feel immediately threatened seem to be wrong. Despite arguments over his program, it is clear that Carter has a better feeling for the people than many reporters and politicians...
...incentives, cutting out the private sector and individual initiative. Following Tinnin's story, the views of TIME'S Board of Economists are summarized by Associate Editor James Grant. TIME will continue to expend its own energy in the weeks and months to come as the nation's energy battle evolves...
...week blitz was over?the most intensive effort by a U.S. President, in or out of wartime, to rally the nation behind a common cause. A stream of high Government officials sought out television interviews and speech appearances to continue the crusade. Politicians searched for the high ground from which to fight the months of battles that lay ahead. The Administration began releasing figures to show how much money it thinks the average American consumer would actually be saving ?instead of losing?under the President's program. And Jimmy Carter had clearly achieved his first, vital goal...
...everyone was at all certain that, as the President claimed, a "national catastrophe" would ensue if nothing was done to check the spiraling U.S. dependence on imported oil and rapidly depleting gas and America's wasteful ways. But as TIME correspondents probed public reaction across the country to Carter's triple TV assault, only a few cynics were still insisting that the energy crisis was a nefarious conspiracy by Big Oil and Big Government to drive up the price of fuel and fleece the citizen. Across the political spectrum and through the many segments of U.S. society, Carter was being...
That in no way meant the nation was united in believing that Carter's prescribed means of dealing with the problem is the only?or even the best?way. From ideologues on the Republican right came the charge that Carter's multifaceted program went too far. Insisted Martin...