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...wife and I, who not that long ago were suspected of being part of The Eastern Media Elite, have been transformed into The American People. Surveys on the White House scandal reflect our views precisely. When the Sunday talk-show commentators whom I refer to as the Sabbath Gasbags pontificate confidently on how The American People are going to respond, the Gasbags are always wrong. In January my wife and I sometimes had to wait for a survey result to find that out. Not anymore. We now realize...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: America, C'est Moi | 10/5/1998 | See Source »

Students were not generally surprised byTesting for the Public's findings, but felt thedifferences in scores reflect economic, notethnic, gaps...

Author: By Vasant M. Kamath, CONTRIBUTING WRITERS | Title: Report Shows LSAT Score Gap | 10/2/1998 | See Source »

Seton said the Council members had problems with the program on Sunday night as they attempted to update the program to reflect new changes in the first-year voting districts. They called Carl P. Sjogreen `00, president of the Harvard Computer Society (HCS), to ask for assistance...

Author: By Elizabeth N. Dewar, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Computer Glitches Delay U.C. Election | 10/1/1998 | See Source »

Airline executives deny that they engage in anticompetitive practices, contend that individual horror stories don't reflect the industry's generally good service record and argue that the benefits of the hub system far outweigh its drawbacks. "It allows medium-size cities like Sacramento to have one-stop service to 200 cities," says American spokesman Chris Chiames. "If we didn't have the hub system," asserts Northwest spokesman Marta Laughlin, "we wouldn't have the number of passengers that are needed for the volume of service we offer. You pay a premium for convenience and accessibility...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Are Flyers Fed Up? | 9/28/1998 | See Source »

What do these insiders see that Wall Street doesn't? Are they thinking that oil prices can fall no lower than they have? Do they know something about OPEC that we don't? No. What these executives see is that their stocks' prices reflect overly pessimistic assumptions by Wall Street--just as those stocks reflected overly optimistic assumptions when many of the same insiders were selling frantically a year ago, for double and triple today's prices...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Oil-Patch Bargains | 9/28/1998 | See Source »

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