Word: sprees
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...result, they have made little attempt to apply the most elementary cost-benefit analyses. Cheaper solutions that could achieve the same ends or almost the same ends have been ignored in favor of overkill. America has just not got value for money from its red-tape spending spree...
...deformities on foot. The action flows across backdrops that are both eye-boggling and wildly diverse. Bakshi has suggested the range and variety of Middle-earth geography by displaying a scrapbook filled with conflicting styles. Those who enjoy humming the scenery can forget the plot and go on a spree of influence hunting. That shot of the hobbits' Shire looks like a fair imitation of Andrew Wyeth; this sunset comes by way of J.M.W. Turner...
...announce his Stage II anti-inflation program. He not only proclaimed wage-price guidelines but also pledged to slash the U.S. budget deficit further and ease the inflationary burden of Government regulation on business. Far from steadying, the financial markets went berserk with the wildest selling spree yet, obviously because investors and speculators judged the policy to be not strong enough. The U.S. stock market tumbled into a deepening nosedive that carried the Dow industrials down 105 points in the twelve trading days before last Wednesday. Gold shot up $17 an oz., to $243, in five days. The dollar sank...
...confronted each other in a complex clash over the federal income tax. Carter had proposed a slash of $17 billion, combined with a number of "reforms" aimed largely at business and middle-class taxpayers. The House rejected most of the reforms, and then the Sen ate went on a spree of special tax cutting for special groups. It voted to boost the capital gains tax exemption from 50% to 60%, to grant deductions for parents with children in private schools and colleges, and to preserve the legendary three-martini lunch. Carter denounced the Senate votes as "inflationary" and "unfair...
...experts are split down the middle over whether the spending spree will continue?or falter in early 1979 and lead the economy into recession. Detroit's automakers, most of whom had underestimated the strength of this year's sales, almost unanimously expect a repeat of 1978's performance next year. Real estate brokers, pointing to high demand from the now grown "baby boom" generation, predict a banner year in 1979. Yet many economists agree with Vice President Ted Tung of Continental Illinois Bank, who warns, "There will be a substantial slowing of consumer spending in the next six months...