Word: sharing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Addressing the Executives Club of Chicago, Nixon drew a bigger crowd than Ronald Reagan, who came into town the same day to talk to the Illinois Chamber of Commerce. Otherwise, Reagan won more than his share of local laurels. Covering five states in three days-his most ambitious foray since taking office-Reagan was at the top of his form despite a bad cold...
...grant the Micronesians a vote on their future by 1972. Few seem interested in complete independence from the U.S., but the debate leading up to such a vote might well have the beneficial effect of placing Micronesia a little higher on the list of U.S. priorities and increasing its share of U.S. aid and know-how. As World War II demonstrated, Micronesia, the Pacific's heartland, is far too important a part of the world to let fall by default into malevolent hands...
...alcoholic wife Birdie (Margaret Leighton). Oscar's brother Ben (George C. Scott) is shrewder, abler, more sardonic. Their sister Regina (Anne Bancroft) is ambitious for wealth, power and position. The trio's chance for the big money rests on joining a foxy Chicago manufacturer (William Prince) and sharing the costs of putting up a cotton mill. The key figure in the deal is Regina's husband Horace (Richard A. Dysart), ill in a Baltimore hospital. She orders him brought home and badgers him to ante up their share of the capital...
...Steel companies were not so fortunate. Second largest Bethlehem Steel Corp. had its lowest quarterly earnings in four years-$23,158,000 on sales of $628,642,000. Bethlehem directors nevertheless voted a quarterly dividend of 37.5? a share, but said that there would be "no further dividend action" this year. Armco, Allegheny Ludlum and Lukens also reported declines...
...very important issues about the role of the University, issues which the University should fully discuss and deal with, rather than attempting to shift the focus to essentially trivial questions of behavioral infractions. The University administration's attempt to isolate and divide the protestors is most ignoble. Those who share this moral outrage--faculty and students alike--should not allow these diverse tactics to prevail and should not allow the essential moral questions to be evaded. Chester W. Hartman Assistant Professor of City Planning...