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...exploit Reagan's problems by either driving a harder bargain or refusing to agree to any arms pact for the next two years. These concerns are rarely voiced in Western Europe, which is still in shock over Reagan's willingness at Reykjavik to discuss deep?and possibly even total???cutbacks of U.S. nuclear weapons on the Continent without first consulting NATO allies. Such a move would force them to base their defense primarily on conventional weapons, in which they are considerably outclassed by Warsaw Pact forces...
...cost to New York is more difficult to reckon. There was no official estimate of the loss, but some city officials thought the total???including damage to buildings and theft of their contents?might be a staggering $1 billion or more. Because of the blackout, the city lost $4 million in tax revenue and had to pay $5 million in overtime to policemen and firemen. Estimates of business losses?beyond the looting?included up to $15 million in lost brokerage commissions for Wall Street and $20 million for retail stores...
Women make up 53% of the nation's registered voters but hold only 5% of the elective positions. Still, the total???7,000 women in elective office?is double five years ago. And in this year's elections, predicts Barbara Jordan, "the candidates will play to women's issues wherever they think it will help them...
...crisis promises to shake the world for at least another five years or longer. It will take that long for importing countries to develop alternative energy sources and more petroleum in nations outside OPEC. Oil will be flowing in from Alaska by 1978, but the total???600,000 bbl. a day at first, 2 million bbl. a day by 1981?will not free the U.S. from the need for foreign supplies. Britain and Norway are each expected to be pumping 2 million bbl. a day from deep below the North Sea by the early 1980s. But the rest of Europe...
...much as the actual election results that brought the Socialists to the brink of power. Neither of the two major parties won an outright majority. The long dominant Christian Democrats, who had promised "no experiments," remained the largest par ty, with 15.2 million votes or 46.1% of the total???a 1.5% decline from the last election in 1965. The Socialists, who pledged to "Build the Modern Germany," won 14 million votes, increasing their 1965 percentage by 3.4% and capturing 42.7% of the electorate. Ironically, the party that ended up holding the balance of power was the one that had lost...
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