Word: viewpoints
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Perhaps, you may be saying that I have taken the wrong viewpoint: the question to ask is, what is the best thing about this movie? Well, there are some features of this film that are less lame than the generally acrid level of badness that pervades the filmic vomit that is The Couch Trip. For example, Walter Matthau's hair is, at one point in the film, realistically disheveled: congrats to the hairdresser. Also, there is a brief scene in which the camera lingers on a TV screen featuring Chevy Chase in a hilarious cameo, selling condoms in a commercial...
...work of impressive breadth and depth. Greider sees the past 100 years of U.S. financial history as a continuous battle between the holders of the wealth, including investors and bankers, and the people who borrow the money, such as farmers, businessmen and consumers. In his analysis, Greider takes a viewpoint that is heretical to Wall Street. Like the prairie Populists of the late 19th century, he argues that moderate inflation is beneficial to the common man. Economic growth is spurred by inflation as long as it does not get out of control. More important, it eases debt because borrowers...
...Neal's Hearsay takes the viewpoint of the seducer or persuader, not the persuaded. Filled with slow jams, the album's concept is a party at O'Neal's house. Annoying between-song patter gives the aura of a small gathering and sets the scene for O'Neal to make his moves on his lady...
Professors who have worked with the Kennedy School economist said he has chosen to pursue the public spotlight, speaking out on Black issues from a conservative viewpoint, rather than a more scholarly career...
From Reed's viewpoint, of course, the opposite is true. Citicorp feels that continuing to view the debt problem as manageable through an endless series of interim solutions is by far the most dangerous way to handle his bank's, and perhaps the world's, economic situation. As Paris Financial Journalist Cahier wrote approvingly last week, "In the kingdom of numbers, sincerity is always rewarded." Citicorp clearly wants its rewards sooner rather than later...