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...crisis is yet to come. Despite the cutbacks, municipal authorities face an unremitting increase in costs, many of them outside their power to control. This year Boston will be forced to ante up $25 million to pay its share of the operating deficit of the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority-a responsibility that state law requires the city to shoulder although it has no hand on the throttle governing the M.B.T.A.'s expenses. Increasingly militant municipal employees are demanding huge pay hikes in New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia and other cities-and some are threatening strikes or job slowdowns if they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CITIES: On the Brink of Bankruptcy | 1/11/1971 | See Source »

...store in downtown Portland, Ore. His store's sales have dropped by one-third in the past twelve years and, like many other doyens of downtown, he argues that the central shopping districts will tumble into deeper trouble unless local governments provide more parking space and better mass transit. Adds Dexter Ware, a senior vice president of Detroit's Hudson Co.: "At some point, major cities must recognize that if they want to save the downtown stores, they will have to provide tax relief." Hudson's recently started closing its downtown store earlier at night because...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Retailing: Down and Out Downtown | 12/7/1970 | See Source »

...judge would silence him and order the remarks stricken from the record. Finally, Dan burst out to tell the packed room that he would neither eat nor drink until he was back in Danbury, as a way of protesting the brutal treatment given to prisoners who are in transit from one jail to another. He had been taken from Danbury on Tuesday, and was not told where he was going or for what he was being taken away. He spent three days and nights either traveling or in solitary confinement, never permitted to mix with other prisoners in the jails...

Author: By Barry Wingard, | Title: The Trial of the Flower City Conspiracy | 12/2/1970 | See Source »

...come under a regulation that makes campaign contributions nontaxable. The bus drivers may not have to pay income tax on their shares of the money, either, since legally it is a gift. Federal planners have worked out any number of ways to subsidize mass transit, but chances are that Fasi's dodge never occurred to them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hawaii: Private Settlement | 11/2/1970 | See Source »

...steward, travel nonstop for up to 200 miles and arrive at their destination with nearly the speed of air travel (counting the drive to and from the airport). To save suburbanites the trouble of traveling into the city to catch a bus, Greyhound built satellite terminals near mass transit systems on the edges of Chicago and Cleveland-an idea that it plans to extend to other cities. As a lure for passengers from abroad, Greyhound sells a $99 foreign-tour ticket that allows non-Americans to travel anywhere on the system for up to 30 days. Meanwhile, the line...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Fighting a Doggy Image | 11/2/1970 | See Source »

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