Word: outlooks
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...subcontinental context, that kind of statement is a license for the killings to continue. According to diplomatic sources, the burden of the crisis made Vajpayee unwell. Adds Vinod Mehta, editor-in-chief of the Indian weekly Outlook magazine, Advani and his supporters used the illness to gather the party's hard-line core and read him the riot act. "The party basically gave him no room to maneuver," says Mehta. "He knew he could have lost his job and he had neither the spirit nor the physical strength to fight back. So he just gave up his moderate stance...
...patrols along the Line of Control to ensure an end to infiltration. All week Mishra was briefing India's national newspapers that the government had decided to tone down the rhetoric. And significantly, when Vajpayee returned to Delhi on Wednesday night, Mishra stayed behind for further talks. But, warns Outlook editor Mehta, Mishra is just an appointed government servant, however close he is to the boss. "Mishra's influence is directly proportional to Vajpayee's position. He has no party base. When Vajpayee goes down, Mishra goes with...
...bonds and 40% of U.S. treasury bonds, according to Bridgewater. In a survey published in May by Merrill Lynch, 63% of global fund managers indicated that U.S. stocks are seen as the most overvalued in the world. The survey showed that only 22% of fund managers believe that the outlook for corporate profits is strongest in the U.S., down from 45% in March. At the heart of the debate on the dollar is the continuing controversy over America's enormous current account deficit - $417.4 billion last year - which comes from Americans buying more goods and services overseas than they sell...
...annual letter to the Faculty of Arts and Sciences in February, outgoing Dean Jeremy R. Knowles noted that despite recent budgetary successes, “looking further ahead, the financial outlook is less robust...
After Sept. 11 jolted the campus and country toward a more pro-military outlook, Summers may have believed at one point that he could soften Harvard’s approach to ROTC without inciting backlash from the Harvard community...