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Perot has hired handlers--Ed Rollins and Hamilton Jordan--who are veterans of the sleaziest campaigns of year past. Perhaps they are partly responsible for Perot's refusal to get specific when it comes to policy questions or proposals...

Author: By Ira E. Stoll, | Title: Ross Perot Looks Corporate to the Core | 7/7/1992 | See Source »

...would hope that business would be more experimental and more flexible," says Sidney Wertimer, recently retired professor of economics at Hamilton College and an early investor in Otisca. "Sure, we've made mistakes. I think probably somewhere along the line Henry Ford and Thomas Watson made a mistake...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Chasing the American Dream | 7/6/1992 | See Source »

Congressional leaders predicted the aid legislation would now move ahead. "He said everything Americans want to hear," observed Lee Hamilton, chairman of a key House Foreign Affairs subcommittee. Yeltsin and Bush then signed seven accords on economic, scientific and military cooperation. Russia was also granted most-favored-nation trading status, which reduces tariffs on Russian goods...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Boris' Boffo Summit Captures Washington | 6/29/1992 | See Source »

...There is no precise way to measure how bad an allergy season is, since pollen counts are notoriously unreliable and as variable as local weather. But in the East, where spring was unusually concentrated this year, some readings have gone off the charts. At this time in 1991, Robert Hamilton, a researcher at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland, generally measured 1,000 to 2,000 pollen grains per cu m of air. This year there have been several days when the reading topped...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Allergies Nothing to Sneeze At | 6/22/1992 | See Source »

...when Rollins teamed up with former Carter White House chief of staff Hamilton Jordan last week to run the still unannounced presidential campaign of billionaire Ross Perot, Bush and his aides took it as a sign of personal betrayal. By turns shocked and furious, they vowed that Rollins had ruined his future in the Republican Party and accused him of caring about little more than money and revenge. Once they simmered down, a harsher reality set in: Perot had signed up a pair of veteran strategists who had helped win the White House three times in five tries and were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Perot Calls in the Pros | 6/15/1992 | See Source »

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