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It was a television advertisement from the mid-’70s.The blue-collar worker shuffles home from work, enters his living room, plunks himself down in his favorite easy chair and takes off his shoes. His wife, heading toward the kitchen to prepare the evening meal, crosses past his stocking feet and suddenly collapses. The ad announcer then praises…
In 1913, the parents of Anna and Mary Constanti moved into an eight room house in an East Detroit neighborhood called Poletown. Anna, now 73 years old, and Mary, now 69, still live in the same house. They have kept their home in good physical repair and the back yard is filled with 60 rose…
No one can fairly accuse Ronald Reagan of reading or thinking very much. But he does a superb regurgitation of what his advisers feed him. Such a forensic performance occurred Feb. 5 in his televised address on the state of the economy. As has been his practice for 20 years, Reagan told the American people…
Years ago, a venerable law professor described the developing law of personal injury as “comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable.” He was referring to the courts’ gradual recognition that injured people had rights to damages from companies whose unsafe products led to the injuries. Ronald Reagan and his Cabinet members give every indication that…
Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. (R-Calif.) has revived an old proposal to allow corporations to buy advertising space on postage stamps. He says his legislation will bring in revenue that could reduce the Postal Service’s deficit. To portray his point, he includes in his explanation kit a sample post card bearing a 7-Up emblem. For each…
After weeks of delay, he handed his death-producing decision to his subordinates to announce and went on a travel junket to Japan. Such behavior is in character for outgoing Secretary of Transportation Neil Goldschmidt. Having overruled his own auto-safety agency’s advice to order the recall of 10 million defective Ford vehicles which have a propensity…
For more than 100 years Americans have expressed deep suspicion about the excessive powers of big business. Farmers pushed for political reforms and anti-monopoly laws early in this century. A few years later factory workers demanded industrial safety laws, an end to child labor and the right to organize. After World War II there arose…
The big rush is on for obtaining cable TV franchises throughout the country. With nearly 20 percent of the homes possessing TV presently wired, the cable industry expects that, during the next 10 years, most of the remaining homes will be connected. The major cable companies, busily wooing local governments in state after state, are…
Though it might have amused Karl Marx, a recent story with the headline “Soviets Could Crush West With Debts” startled Toronto Star readers: “The Kremlin can take over the world simply by defaulting on colossal loans it has had from the West. International bankers and Western diplomats see the scenario, which sounds -like a plot…
He had been in elective office for 50 years and, for Sen. Warren Magnuson, D-Wash., this was his last evening. He sat in his Appropriations Committee office, sipping Washington State wine with a staff member and an old friend. They were watching on a television monitor the House of Representatives’ deliberations on the continuing budget…