Word: panels
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Last week in Chicago, Vice President Agnew proposed that television news commentators be publicly examined on their "underlying philosophy" by a panel of Government officials. On the CBS Evening News, Eric Sevareid replied...
Though Vietnamese pilots often must sit on pillows to see over the instrument panel of American-made planes, they are by no means short on combat experience. Most American pilots, whose combat tour in Viet Nam usually lasts only one year, can expect to fly 200 to 300 sorties, or about 400 to 600 combat hours. Many Vietnamese pilots have been flying combat missions for years and boast up to 4,000 flying hours, 90% of them in combat. As a result, says General Lucius D. Clay Jr., commander of the Seventh Air Force and son of the famous World...
Basic Difference. The Administration's economic management came under fire at week's end from an unexpected source: the mostly Republican corporate chiefs who attended a meeting of the Business Council in Hot Springs, Va. A panel discussion with Government policymakers exposed what General Electric Chairman Fred Borch called "a basic judgmental difference as to whether monetary and fiscal policies alone will slow down inflation. They [the Government panelists] think it will. We do not." The executives called for a variety of Government measures aimed at improving productivity in order to offset the impact of wage increases, including...
...BORTION and population control were the issues that brought on some of the strongest disagreements among the conservatives during a Friday panel discussion. In an earlier speech, Dr. Charles Rice had hit the abortion question hard, and received a standing ovation from his audience for the attack. This government has appointed a commission on population control headed by John D. Rockefeller III. This commission is promoting, for anywhere in the country, abortion on demand...
Members of TIME'S panel base their forecasts on a belief that the money supply will grow somewhere around 5% a year. They disagree most sharply not about what is likely to happen but about whether the U.S. could do better. Most argue that the nation could safely pursue somewhat more expansionary policies. In lonely dissent, Beryl Sprinkel replies: "If we say, 'We've got lots of slack, so go, man,' we will wind up a year from now moving toward full employment. But inflation will be rekindled, and we will go down one more time...