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...investments in banks lending money to the South African government or companies operating with or in South Africe. Meanwhile, in abstaining on measure like the one at Mobil, the Corporation chooses to hide behind a smokescreen of excuses, citing items of grammar or careless wording that supposedly render resolutions infeasible or impracticable. The Corporation purports to consider individual stockholder issues seriously, sticking to its policy of considering each one on an ad hoc basis. Since 1972, when it created the ACSR, the Corporation has delegated to that committee the gathering of facts and the interpreting of community opinion on various...
...they are equally susceptible to both the ridicule of "old-fashioned" liberal economics and the praise of the new policy elite and its corporate clientele who can only profit from the implementation of this new economics. Nevertheless, solitary reliance on the supply-side theories will occasion problems that would render impotent the economists' logic. The present Republican administration should not be surprised if the near future does not see a rapid reversal of the stagnation they have long been blaming on liberal economic policy, high taxation and deficit spending...
Microfiche is the first step in a "historic advance for Harvard" that may eventually render Widener's huge card catalog obsolete. Oscar Handlin, director of the University Library, said this week...
...simple to be inarticulate about things for which there are no words and which glamorous, eloquent action would romanticize. Laura Harrington, as Donna, is a beautiful, unpolished young woman who makes the complex emotions she must portray believable. The sensual awkwardness of her and Michelle Green as Marlene render their strange position more poignant...
...program with certain features Ronald Reagan would be expected to admire. Operating within only the broadest of federal guidelines, it permits individual states to determine who is eligible for its benefits, and lets the states decide how much doctors, hospitals and nursing homes can collect for the services they render. Georgia is one of the most tightfisted: it has stiff eligibility requirements and ranks 46th among the 50 states in Medicaid funds received annually from Washington, even though it is 13th in the population ranking of the states. Despite such frugality, Georgia expects to share in Reagan's proposed...