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...Since there is a lack of clean water in 85 percent of the Third World, and little fuel in many areas to heat and sterilize formula, and since mothers who use the formula for even three days find that their breasts dry up and can no longer nurse, experts predict that one to three million babies die each year from improper bottle feeding (though not all of this is due to Nestle...

Author: By Mark E. Feinberg, | Title: Behind the Boycotts | 11/22/1983 | See Source »

Since the Administration has been on both sides of the issue, it is hard to predict whether Reagan will sign the bill once the House and Senate have ironed out their small differences. Either way, the real test will come in 1985, when Congress is scheduled to do a comprehensive overhaul of all farm-price programs. Then it will be seen who has more clout, the milk lobby or the milk consumers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cowed by the Dairymen | 11/21/1983 | See Source »

Executives of the three commercial networks happily predict a marked increase in the number of televised debates. NBC, ABC and CBS have already dispatched telegrams to the Democratic and Republican National Committees inviting candidates to participate in on-air debates some time next year. Broadcasters maintain that they will be able to bring greater flair to staging the encounters than the league was able to do. Says CBS Senior Vice President Gene Mater: "We can do a better job. Communications is our business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: More Debates? | 11/21/1983 | See Source »

Busch spokesman Wayne Charness could not predict the effect of the union's rejection on further negotiations. "We are going to have to wait and see," he said. Charness would not reveal the details of the management's offer, hammered out at a weekend-long negotiating session...

Author: By Adam M. Carman, | Title: Busch Strikers Reject Entest Offer in Contract Negotiations | 11/8/1983 | See Source »

...surgeon for a few months," a certain high school teacher was fond of saying, "then I'm sure I could operate just as well as anyone with 13 years experience." Laws prevent such hands-on medical training, but if he tried operating that way anyhow, it's easy to predict his fate. Dozens of contract-waving literary agents would scramble past his shabbily dressed public defense lawyer and one of the first would be the type that signed up James S. Kunen on "The Making of a Criminal Lawyer"--the story of Kunen's two and a half years...

Author: By Clark J. Freshman, | Title: A Guilty Verdict | 11/5/1983 | See Source »

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