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Over 2000 Britons, most of them middle-aged or elderly, trusted the Eli Lilly drug company in Indianapolis and survived to regret it. Starting around eight years ago, they took a drug called Opren (named. Oraflex in the U.S.) to allegedly combat pain and inflammation from their arthritis. The agony for many of them ranged from…
Lee Iacocca had this to say about air bags in his 1984 bestselling autobiography: “There are those who believe that air bags are the answer. I disagree. I’ve been speaking out against them since they were first developed almost twenty years ago.” Now look at this report from the February 10th Wall Street Journal: “Chrysler…
After cutting their deals and indenturing their treasuries to corporate interests between past elections which they have won several Presidential candidates are lobbing some catchall primary-time populism to the voters in the upcoming primaries. Give the folks some corporate bear meat, their advisers say; it fleshes out that “send ’em a message” urge against the…
The tide of public frustration and indignation over rising auto insurance rates appears unabated. Consumers cannot refuse to buy; auto insurance is a necessity and, in most states, is compulsory. The problems are threefold: inadequate regulation, inadequate competition and inadequate comparative price information and voice for motorists. Presently, state regulation of the insurance industry is…
Out in California where many trends across the country get started, the large agribusiness growers and big supermarket chains have spotted one that has them worried. Raley’s, a small grocery chain with 57 stores in central California, has teamed up with Stan Rhodes and his NutriClean firm to test increasing numbers of fruits for hazardous…
Preston Tisch, a near billionaire, wanted to take some time off from wealth accumulation to perform some public service. In mid-1986 he became the Postmaster General and a few days ago he announced his resignation to return to the family business in New York. Before Mr. Tisch leaves Washington, however, he will have done something,…
Lee Thomas, the administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) should be worried these days. Appointed to the post by Reagan to continue the agency’s rehabilitation after the regulatory corruption and abdication by Reagan’s first EPA chief, Ann Gorsuch, he seems helpless to stop a major slide from mediocrity to abject surrender to the polluters.…
The stench of a political tyrant is spreading beyond the state legislature in Columbus, Ohio, these days. But then, House Speaker, Vernal G. Riffe Jr., hasn’t cared how he smells for nearly two decades; he only cares how he rules. Riffe owns an insurance agency in the small southern Ohio town of New Boston. But…
Lloyd Cutler and Ronald Reagan are at it again. Cutler is the Washington lawyer representing Honda’s drive to keep the dangerously unstable all-terrain vehicle in the hands of 12-year-olds. Reagan is just as persisting in his refusal to regulate Honda and three other Japanese ATV manufacturers who dominate 99 percent of the market in this…
It would have been folk singer, Harry Chapin’s forty fifth birthday on December 7, 1987. But a tragic car-truck collision on the Long Island Expressway in 1981 ended this young artist -citizen’s supercharged drive to end the specter of Hunger on Earth. Chapin’s legacy is growing rapidly and the reasons are not obscure. Among artists,…