Word: outlooks
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...board members have some differences about the outlook. Eckstein thinks the recession will last only two quarters; Robert Nathan, a Washington economic consultant, fears that it may stretch out over as many as four. The consensus is two or perhaps three quarters. Eckstein calculates that corporate profits after taxes will rise only 5% next year, vs. 14% in 1978-and will go up even that modestly only because the tax rate on most corporate income will drop from 48% to 46% on Jan. 1. Arthur Okun, senior fellow at Washington's Brookings Institution, put the increase even after taxes...
...world of Richard Helms has been a long struggle against the marauding Russian bear. That is why Helms speaks so strongly about the grim outlook in Iran. Says he: "We ought to go to our NATO allies and make certain that we are all together, and then we ought to sit down with the Russians and make it plain to them that having the Persian Gulf under the control of Communists is simply not acceptable...
...Hunt's outlook for the season remains optimistic. "They're good kids, look at the records they've set," he said...
...whole, the answers have been highly unfavorable towards the cults, and highly narrow in outlook. The whole spectrum of U.S. opinion has come down hard on these groups. The traditional establishment correctly perceives them as destabilizing, offering alternative values and lifestyles not easily controlled by the usual middleclass institutions and therefore dangerously unpredictable. In rejecting the acquisitive values of the mainstream the cults reject America. The political left and remnants of the '60s movements also attack the cults with a passion; after all, the cults focus attention on spiritual matters, self-realization, mystical attainment, and divert attention from the ever...
...publisher, announced that publication would be suspended at year's end.*Officials at MCA Inc., the Los Angeles-based entertainment conglomerate (Jaws, Airport 77) that bought New Times from Hirsch and other investors last year, said they were willing to keep the magazine going, but Hirsch found the outlook hopeless. Though circulation climbed from an initial 100,000 to today's 355,000 and advertising gained after a slow start, New Times never had enough of either to be consistently profitable...