Word: samuelson
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...over the past 15 years." Even the most liberal of the "New Economists," whose free-spending policies have helped sustain the five-year boom, are openly troubled. "We've passed the point of creeping inflation," said M.I.T.'s Paul Samuelson, "and reached the point of crawling inflation...
...become established." Arthur Burns, Ike's chief economic adviser, told a U.S. Chamber of Commerce symposium: "While the Government is lecturing the private community on the need for restraints in price and wage adjustment, it is continuing an expansionist monetary policy." Even M.I.T.'s Paul A. Samuelson, a leading "new economist," observed that "the time has come to reinforce wage-price guidelines with something much, much stronger...
...McVeigh, 19, to be the first girl managing editor in the student paper's 93-year history. "It's pretty hard for the boys to forget I'm a girl," the Cliffie admitted, "but you must be businesslike." Thoroughly upstaged, her boss, new Crimson President Robert Samuelson, said gracefully: "She has great wit; she is a good choice...
...Richard Blumenthal, William B. Clayton, Douglas M. Cohen, Robert J. Domreae, Conal C. Doyle, David L. Friedman, John D. Gerhart, Curtis A. Hessler, Thomas R. Ittelson, George H. Rosen, Robert J. Samuelson, Daniel J. Singal, Franklin F. Smith, Sanford J. Ungar, and Linda G. McVeigh
...come to full flower, a school of fervid apostles has been preaching it in the U.S. for more than a generation. Harvard's Alvin Hansen, the first great Keynesian teacher, taught it to hundreds of economists, many of them now in high positions. Hansen's brightest student was Paul Samuelson, who later wrote a Keynesian-angled college textbook on economics that has gone to 2,000,000 copies and influenced the thinking of count less teachers and students...