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...large numbers of individual investors. The shares of many other big U.S. companies tend to be more concentrated in the hands of bank trustees and mutual-fund managers. Bank trust departments alone held $167 billion worth of common stock at the end of 1967. Allied with institutions that wield huge numbers of proxies, corporate managers will not be easily outvoted. But the public interest is likely to make itself felt in one way or another. G.M.'s experience shows that unless those who hold the votes become more sensitive to public concerns, managers will face increasing demands for Government...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporations: Toward a Wider Constituency | 6/1/1970 | See Source »

...clear that students can wield their greatest influence and power within their own communities. It is unlikely in fact that students will be able to sustain long-term organizing against the war anywhere but on their own campuses. This has to do more than anything else with the seriousness of the organizing required to eliminate an evil that reaches to the root of the American power structure. Students were able to canvass with some success around anti-war referenda and moratoria, but those movements were innocuous and patently unsuccessful in stopping the Vietnam conflict. In their opposition...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: On the Other Hand No Alliance | 5/5/1970 | See Source »

...vigorous self-confidence of Spock's new book, Decent and Indecent, self-doubt and despair creep in. In these moments Spock bemoans the futility of rearing well adjusted babies who will be incinerated by a sick society. Unspoken is his personal despair that Spock the activist can't wield the power of Spock the psychiatrist/pediatrician. He changed childbearing practices but can't stop...

Author: By Marvin S. Swartz, | Title: From the Shelf Decent and Indecent | 3/23/1970 | See Source »

...moon. And of course that dubious bequest, thermonuclear energy leashed in the Bomb. That weapon redefined war. For the first time, man held in his hands a weapon that could destroy the earth and all living things upon it-a weapon so powerful that human reason would refuse to wield it. So, in any event, goes the argument of those who see in the H-bomb mankind's first true hope of peace. But Andreski and others are gloomy about its potential as a deterrent. As men and weapons have multiplied, so have wars. "Our own century," writes Andreski...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: The Case for War | 3/9/1970 | See Source »

...thing works out. I'll get together with Bud and make a deal. We'll wield our considerable influence with Nathan Pasey, who runs the place, Dean Watson, who helps him, and Dolph Samborski, who keeps the jocks in line. Bud, with his impressive silver tongue, will woo Mr. Taylor. Mr. Winship, and Fran Rosa, who basically run the Globe...

Author: By John L. Powers, | Title: Powers of the Press | 12/3/1969 | See Source »

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