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...Spokesmen for the department say that radical theory as well as a number of the traditional subdivisions--industrial organization, comparative systems, business economics and others--will be among the eleven areas...

Author: By Walter N. Rothschild iii, | Title: Head Tutor's Report Suggests Changed Economics Program | 2/26/1974 | See Source »

Honeywell manufactures bombs used by the United States during the Vietnam War, and now sold to the Thieu regime. Company spokesmen claim that Honeywell is "a customer of the Defense Department," and that the implementation of their products is beyond the company's control. The protesters charge that Honeywell is an accomplice to genocide, and that its representatives are not welcome at Harvard...

Author: By Christopher B. Daly, | Title: The Spirit Of Activism Returns | 2/23/1974 | See Source »

While Pompidou's health has long been unmentionable to French spokesmen, the fact is that President Nixon was so alarmed by the French President's appearance last summer when the two of them held a minisummit in Iceland that the U.S. embassy in Paris assigned a man to a Pompidou watch. He saw what other curious observers have noted too: gradually Pompidou has reduced his schedule to almost a blank page. When he addressed the Gaullist Party faithful in Poitiers three weeks ago, precautions were taken to preserve his strength. An armchair was placed close...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: An Illness in the Elysee Palace | 2/18/1974 | See Source »

What is wrong with Pompidou? The secret is locked away in the Elysee, which brusquely turns away all queries. Unofficially, however, spokesmen claim that he suffers from painful arthritis and that his puffy appearance is the result of massive doses of cortisone. Others outside the government speculate, however, that the real malady may be multiple myeloma, a disease of the bone marrow that can also be treated with cortisone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: An Illness in the Elysee Palace | 2/18/1974 | See Source »

...been making overtures to reestablish Egyptian friendship with the U.S., Heikal's last column on Feb. 1 accused Washington of undermining Egypt's political role and disrupting Arab unity. The voice of al Ahram obviously was no longer speaking for the government. After Heikal was fired, government spokesmen explained that he had tried to build "a state within a state" and turn "the Ahram Building into a new center of power...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: EGYPT: No Doubts About Who's in Charge | 2/18/1974 | See Source »

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