Montana Kaimin, February 27, 1981 Associated Students of the University of Montana

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Montana Kaimin, February 27, 1981 Associated Students of the University of Montana University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Associated Students of the University of Montana Montana Kaimin, 1898-present (ASUM) 2-27-1981 Montana Kaimin, February 27, 1981 Associated Students of the University of Montana Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy . Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper Recommended Citation Associated Students of the University of Montana, "Montana Kaimin, February 27, 1981" (1981). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 7241. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/7241 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. montana KUFM ’s future up in air under Reagan’s cuts By JIM MARKS According to Conrad, the 25- Montana Kaimin Raportar percent cut is included in a plan to cut public broadcasting funds by kaimin National Public Radio’s con- 38 percent over the next three Friday, Feb. 27,1981 Missoula, Mont. Vol. 83, No. 65 gressionally approved budget may years. The current $180 million be cut 25 percent under President fund could drop to $100 million by Reagan’s proposed budget 1984. recommendations, Terry Conrad, “This is not a cut for the program and music director of economy’s sake,” he said. "It’s a KUFM, said yesterday. cut for political purposes.” Many bills roll through treadmill Conrad said Congress approves public broadcasting budgets two Conrad said major parts of years in advance. This approval, he public broadcasting, the arts and before Legislature’s break said, "is designed to provide an humanities, seem to be singled out insulation for public broad­ for reductions. He said this is By BOOMER SLOTHOWER — not including a number of ate got out about noon and the casting.” shown by the proposed 50-percent Montana Kaimin Legislative Reporter appropriations bills — on which House finished about 3:45 p.m. “NPR’s argument against the cuts from the National Endowment the legislators must act before they Here is a list of some of the bills budget cut is to let the cuts start for the Arts and the National and adjourn in mid-April. that either died or survived the with the new budget, not with the Endowment for the Humanities. CATHY KRADOLFER The last few days before the Montana Kaimin Legislative Reporter legislative treadmill. present one,” he said. “Public broadcasting, as a vehi­ transmittal deadline, -with both In the House: Public broadcasting proponents cle for the arts and the humanities, houses working 15-to-20-hour • conference committee are taking this argument to Con­ It's half-time at the Montana is getting more than its measure of days and voting on up to 40 bills a Legislature. All the bills, except amendments to the bill containing gress, Conrad said. “It’s a matter of cuts,” Conrad said. day, are times of long debate, short revenue bills, that survived the first supplemental funds for state agen­ defending the insulation for the tempers and quick passage or If Congress approves the part of the legislative process in cies, including the university radio network.” death of a large number of bills. Reagan cuts, Conrad said, it could one house have been sent to the system, were approved and sent to He said letters encouraging the During the inevitable pre­ cause a “total revision” of KUFM other house to face the second the Senate. support of public broadcasting are transmittal rush, at least one programming, although he said he part. The legislators, for the most • a bill that would allow faculty being sent to members of the senator or representative could be did not know at this-time what part, have gone home »to rest, members and other salaried House Appropriations Committee counted on to implore his exactly would result. He said NPR recuperate and get ready for the employees of the university and public broadcasting con­ colleagues to “finish up debate on is an essential part of KUFM next two months. system to be paid on the first of the stituencies. this bill so we can all get home programming, and a reduction in When they return to work Mon­ month passed second and third “Too many people are affected before midnight.” Most often, the its services could hurt. day, the 150 senators and reading. by public broadcasting. I think debate continued anyway. representatives will have 287 fewer • a bill that would provide Congress will be surprised at the "We need as many people as we Both houses adjourned relative­ bills to put through the process of $600,000 to the state work-study reaction of NPR supporters,” Con­ can getting their views to Con­ ly early on Wednesday. The Sen­ committee hearings, committee Cont. on p. 8 rad said. gress," he said. vote and full house approval. Those bills were killed by an adverse vote somewhere along the Depressing statistics face Vietnam vets way in the legislative process. But there are still 1,000-plus bills By C. L. GILBERT said that he was recently asked if he would fight in Vietnam again. "There Montana Kaimin Raportar is no way,” Carpentier said. "Not after the way I’ve been treated since I got back. For me and for other vets, there has been something missing. I Air quality: good There are more than 250,000 Vietnam veterans on bail, parole or keep looking fora place to start, a place where somebody gives a damn.” particulate level: 46 probation. There are more than 70,000 in jail. The suicide rate among Carpentier is a social worker now. He said he gets comments from his Vietnam veterans is 33 percent higher than the national average. Of all fellow workers that he has a “way of dealing with criminals and alcoholics the veterans who were married before they went to Vietnam, 38 percent and bums. That’s because I know where they're at,” he said. “I'm there, were divorced within six months of returning to the United States. The too.” same day the American hostages in Iran returned home to a heroes' Rick Payne was in the Green Berets in Vietnam. He said he did not have welcome, 50 Vietnam veterans committed suicide. any problems stemming from his war experiences until nearly four years These figures were among many presented last night at a forum titled after he returned. In 1972, in a blackout, he beat his wife and put her in the “A Warrior’s Homecoming" as part of a week of events dealing with hospital. She divorced him shortly afterwards. In 1973 he “beat a man half problems of the Vietnam veteran. to death” and did not remember the incident. He married again and Michael Marks, a Missoula psychologist who has dealt with delayed during another blackout, beat his new wife. He is going through divorce stress syndrome, a problem he called “a normal reaction to an abnormal proceedings again. situation," said Vietnam veterans are dealing with problems caused by Payne has served time in jail and has undergone intensive psychiatric stress from experiences in Vietnam "and, I repeat and, experiences when evaluations in relation to those incidents. He is the secretary of the they got home." Vietnam Veterans of Montana and is trying to help other veterans with “The war is not over. The war goes on," Marks said. But he did say that similar problems. "Through helping other vets. I’m trying to help myself. I veterans are trying to deal with their problems. “In the shrink world that I don’t want to wake up and have to ask my wife ‘Where’d you get those work in, if you admit you have a problem, then you’ve got it half beat." bruises?’ ’’ * Marks said that veterans are admitting thaf they do have problems. Darla Rucker is the ex-wife of a Green Beret. Soon after she was Often with voices shaking with emotion, the panelists of the forum, married, she said “I found I didn’t dare touch him at night.” "Twice she most of whom were Vietnam veterans, described their experiences was choked nearly to death by her husband. Every time a door slammed, during the war and afterwards. Bill Carpentier, who received many medals for valor while in Vietnam, Cont. on p. 8 o p in io n ------------------------------------------------------------ Pring, Penthouse and the First Amendment The First Amendment was who had a rather unique skill — fingernails. probably won’t be sympathetic, es­ bludgeoned last week in W yom ing. levitating men by performing oralsex Not exactly concrete evidence. pecially if they’re ignorant enough to The decision to award Kimerli Jayne with them. Pring contends that the This damage to the First Amendment be inflamed by television-style court­ Pring, Miss W yom ing of 1978, $26.5 story caused her severe emotional can be attributed to the fact that room theatrics. million in damages for being “libeled” distress, because she received attorney Spence is a highly successful The case probably should not have in a Penthouse magazine article was obscene telephone calls after the trial court lawyer, who gained national been decided by a jury. Th e real test proclaimed a "victory for freedom of article appeared in August of 1979. acclaim in 1979 for helping win the will come when the judge acts on the the press" by Pring's attorney, Gerry How many calls will Pring receive $10.5 million Karen Silkwood suit motion to overturn the verdict, a Spence.
Recommended publications
  • By Michael Mann FINAL DRAFT March 6, 1980
    by Michael Mann FINAL DRAFT March 6, 1980 "I am cruising day and night in a brand new Caddy convertible. I'm wearing $150 slacks, silk shirts, $800 suits, a watch loaded with diamonds and a perfect 3 karat ring with no visible means of support. And you ask how I make a living? Baby, I am a thief." PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING CHARACTERS' NAMES HAVE BEEN CHANGED IN THE SCRIPT: OLD NAME NEW NAME "WATTS" "BOREKSCO" "ANCEL" "BARCELL" "DR. YELLIN" "DR. SHELTON" (Sc. 67) "SAM MALTZ" "SAM GROSSMAN" "MALTZ SCRAPYARD" now becomes "GROSSMAN SCRAPYARD" 3/20/80 "THIEF" BLACK SCREEN. TILT DOWN TO: 1 EXT. STREET - FRANK - TWILIGHT 1 * The haze and rain of winter weather is incandescent. It RAINS. A little jumpy, he looks out at some- * thing. We don't know what. His hair is wet. * 2 OMITTED 2 * 3 CLOSER - FRANK 3 on the sidewalk watching from another angle. 4 OVER HIS SHOULDER - APARTMENT BUILDING 4 * across the street down the block. People coming * home from work race for doorways. As Frank watches, we don't know who he is. We don't know why he's looking at this building. CUT TO: 5 INT. BLACK ELDORADO - FRANK'S POV - SAME BUILDING 5 but pebbled by rain. He watches from inside the car, now. Closer. He gets out. THROUGH the pebbled WINDSCREEN we SEE him turn up the collar of his coat and enter. CUT TO: 6 INT. BUILDING - REAR SHOTS - FRANK - DAY 6 up stairs. CUT TO: 3/29/80 2. 7 INT. APARTMENT - VI - TWILIGHT 7 * BUZZER.
    [Show full text]
  • Evacuation Orders Falling Short
    HURRICANE MICHAEL COPING FORUM TONIGHT LOCAL | A3 PANAMA CITY LOCAL & STATE | A3 CITY ASKS FEMA FOR 100 EMPTY TRAILERS Thursday, April 25, 2019 www.newsherald.com @The_News_Herald facebook.com/panamacitynewsherald 75¢ Evacuation orders falling short Hurricanes, wildfi res Bay County emergency man- beaches. where we were just beside fast-moving wildfires. present challenges agement chief Mark Bowen Traffic was flowing ourselves,” Bowen said. “We Zachary Byrd said he got for emergency offi cials and his employees watched smoothly when there should couldn’t move our population “not a word” to evacuate the live footage through tears. have been gridlock. to act.” a wildfire closing in on the By Jennifer Kay They weren’t looking at Bowen had ordered about It’s a problem Florida offi- California town of Paradise. and Paul Elias increasingly dire storm fore- 120,000 coastal residents cials face before every big He had signed up for every The Associated Press casts last October. They were to evacuate but only about storm, though they usu- warning system and previ- watching cameras trained 20,000 actually left, accord- ally have far more time ously got evacuation orders MIAMI — With Hurricane on Bay County’s three main ing to preliminary estimates than their counterparts in on his cellphone. But on the Michael strengthening as it evacuation routes lead- by county engineers. California, who need to evac- took aim at the Panhandle, ing away from sugar-white “There was this period uate residents threatened by See EMERGENCY, A11 TAFB housing repairs Sanctuary city jetting into high gear ban approved by state House By Zac Anderson notions of compassion to GateHouse Media the views of the Found- [email protected] ing Fathers and the family immigration stories of TALLAHASSEE — The many lawmakers.
    [Show full text]
  • Child Sex Trafficking Is an Underground Economy That Thrives Here, and Everywhere
    Child sex trafficking is an underground economy that thrives here, and everywhere. How can we help those who have been ignored for so long? {Story by J. David McSwane / Photography and video by Dan Wagner} Wearing only a sports bra and boxers, bruises on her back, the girl surged through the salon’s door. Her feet were bare and bleeding from the race over asphalt, her speech a frenzied heave as she spilled the secret of where she had been, what she had been doing. Camille Johnson’s daughter confirmed the unthinkable. For weeks, Johnson had searched these north Sarasota streets, knocking on doors in the early morning, shouting in the rain, asking about her missing 17-year-old daughter, Wa-Das Crowle (WAH-Dez CROU-lee). Everyone calls her Moe. It was beyond frightening that Moe’s whereabouts and activities had been a mystery, for in this segregated tract of Sarasota, news both good and bad spreads fast and far through blood ties and marriage and church circles that connect nearly everyone by one degree. In this neighborhood, the gossip collides at Johnson’s meager salon. Johnson, a tall woman, now seems diminutive against the darkness she strains to remember. She points to the Japanese sword in the corner, between the plastic cupboard and the partition. She endeavors to explain why she clutched the sword, why she confronted her daughter’s abusers. Two of her adult children, listening, gather the grandchildren and walk out into the night. “One day,” Johnson says, “she called and said that she was OK, and I didn’t need to look for her.
    [Show full text]
  • Trial Advocacy & Writing Spring 2015 Professor Melvin Law 630
    Trial Advocacy & Writing Spring 2015 Professor Melvin Law 630 TABLE OF CONTENTS SYLLABUS .................................................................................................................................................. 2 COPURSE SCHEDULE ............................................................................................................................ 8 CASE FILE ................................................................................................................................................. 10 SAMPLE TRIAL OUTLINE .................................................................................................................... 46 TRIAL BRIEF ............................................................................................................................................. 53 TRIAL BRIEF ON MOTION TO SUPPRESS ..................................................................................... 69 DIRECT EXAMINATION ....................................................................................................................... 75 APPROACH POINT CROSS EXAMINATION WORKSHEETS.................................................... 91 SYLLABUS TRIAL ADVOCACY & WRITING – Summer 2014 Professor John Melvin Email: [email protected] Tel.: 770.528.3067 w Office Hours: 30 minutes before class or by appointment. Dates: 01/13 - 04/17 Tuesday evenings Time: 06:15PM-09:30PM Room: tba COURSE MISSION: To develop aggressive, professional and effective advocates who will persuade by establishing
    [Show full text]
  • 1000 Interesting Facts to Blow Your Mind Factrepublic.Com
    © Fact Republic 1000 Interesting Facts to Blow Your Mind Sources available at FactRepublic.com - Where Facts are Born 1000 Interesting Facts to Blow Your Mind FactRepublic.com 1. Actor Leonard Nimoy once gave a cab ride to John F. Kennedy. The future president told the aspiring actor, "Lots of competition in your business, just like in mine. Just remember there's always room for one more good one." 2. In order to advertise their services, prostitutes in ancient Greece wore sandals that left the words "follow me" imprinted in the dirt as they walked. 3. Nissan used the number 23 in motorsport racing because the number 2 translates to ni and, the number 3 translates to san. 23 translates to ni-san. 4. Due to human efforts, the ozone layer will recover to 1980 levels by 2050 and will be fully repaired by 2070. 5. When Edward I of England was coming back from the ninth crusade in 1272, he learned that his father had died and that he had been made the king of England. Instead of returning home to be crowned, Edward went on a leisurely trip to Italy and France for almost two years and only came back in 1274. 6. Robin Williams attended Juilliard School but dropped out in his junior year because his teacher, a renowned actor/producer, told him that there was nothing that he could learn from Juilliard that he didn't already know. 7. Pumpkins, watermelons, avocados, and bananas are all berries while strawberries, raspberries, and blackberries are not. 8. A project's "Bus Factor" denotes the number of people in a company who need to be 'run over by a bus' to send the company into such disarray that it would not be able to proceed.
    [Show full text]
  • Answer Key to Accompany
    Answer Key to accompany Boston Columbus Hoboken Indianapolis New York San Francisco Amsterdam Cape Town Dubai London Madrid Milan Munich Paris Montreal Toronto Delhi Mexico City São Paulo Sydney Hong Kong Seoul Singapore Taipei Tokyo Answer Key to accompany Wordsmith: A Guide to College Writing, Sixth Edition, by Pamela Arlov. Copyright © 2016 by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of America. This publication is protected by copy- right, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise. For information regarding permissions, request forms and the appropriate contacts within the Pearson Education Global Rights & Permissions Department, please visit www.pearsoned.com/permissions/. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10–online–19 18 17 16 15 ISBN 10: 0-321-98393-9 www.pearsonhighered.com ISBN 13: 978-0-321-98393-0 Wordsmith: A Guide to College Writing Page 1 CHAPTER 1 The Writing Process EXERCISE 1-1 THE WRITING PROCESS Answer the following questions to review your knowledge of the writing process. 1. The five steps in the writing process are prewriting , planning , drafting , revising , and proofreading . 2. The “thinking step” in the writing process is called prewriting . 3. The part of the writing process that involves correcting grammar and punctuation is called proofreading . 4. Major changes would most likely be made during the revising step in the writing process. 5. True or false? The steps in the writing process often overlap.
    [Show full text]
  • Masaryk University Faculty of Arts
    Masaryk University Faculty of Arts Department of English and American Studies English Language and Literature Šárka Tripesová The Anatomy of Humour in the Situation Comedy Seinfeld Bachelor‟s Diploma Thesis Supervisor: Mgr. Pavel Drábek, Ph.D. 2010 I declare that I have worked on this thesis independently, using only the primary and secondary sources listed in the bibliography. …………………………………………….. Šárka Tripesová ii Acknowledgement I would like to thank Mgr. Pavel Drábek, Ph.D. for the invaluable guidance he provided me as a supervisor. Also, my special thanks go to my boyfriend and friends for their helpful discussions and to my family for their support. iii Table of Contents 1 INTRODUCTION 1 2 SEINFELD AS A SITUATION COMEDY 3 2.1 SEINFELD SERIES: THE REALITY AND THE SHOW 3 2.2 SITUATION COMEDY 6 2.3 THE PROCESS OF CREATING A SEINFELD EPISODE 8 2.4 METATHEATRICAL APPROACH 9 2.5 THE DEPICTION OF CHARACTERS 10 3 THE TECHNIQUES OF HUMOUR DELIVERY 12 3.1 VERBAL TECHNIQUES 12 3.1.1 DIALOGUES 12 3.1.2 MONOLOGUES 17 3.2 NON-VERBAL TECHNIQUES 20 3.2.1 PHYSICAL COMEDY AND PANTOMIMIC FEATURES 20 3.2.2 MONTAGE 24 3.3 COMBINED TECHNIQUES 27 3.3.1 GAG 27 4 THE METHODS CAUSING COMICAL EFFECT 30 4.1 SEINFELD LANGUAGE 30 4.2 METAPHORICAL EXPRESSION 32 4.3 THE TWIST OF PERSPECTIVE 35 4.4 CONTRAST 40 iv 4.5 EXAGGERATION AND CARICATURE 43 4.6 STAND-UP 47 4.7 RUNNING GAG 49 4.8 RIDICULE AND SELF-RIDICULE 50 5 CONCLUSION 59 6 SUMMARY 60 7 SHRNUTÍ 61 8 PRIMARY SOURCES 62 9 REFERENCES 70 v 1 Introduction Everyone as a member of society experiences everyday routine and recurring events.
    [Show full text]
  • Entertainment Weekly | June 12, 2015 [ P
    SUMMER TV PREVIEW! PLUS AND TRUE DETECTIVE FEAR THE WALKING DEAD TEEN WOLF MORE CAITLYN JENNER HER NEW TV SHOW! A $$$ BOOK DEAL? How she’ll change the world for future Jennerations JUNE 12, 2015 • #1367 Te d Talks THE SCOOP ON THE SUMMER’S FILTHIEST— AND MOST LOVABLE— SEQUEL PLUS 20 MORE AMAZING NSFW Bottoms COMEDIES Up! CAUTION: CONTENTS INCLUDE ZOMBIES, CLOSE TALKERS, AND A VERY FAMOUS PIE Our new Cookie Cores have a uniquely spoonable cookie center surrounded by chunk-filled ice cream. It’s a whole new way to love cookies. So start spooning. © Ben & Jerry’s Homemade, Inc. 2015 Cows: ©Woody Jackson 1997 20812C The Top 10 Things We Love This Week Rose Byrne, Melissa McCarthy, and Jason Statham SPY The name is McCarthy. Melissa McCarthy. And what her sometimes brilliant, sometimes bumbling CIA-analyst character lacks in James Bond bona fides is more than made up for by her fantastic star turn in Paul Feig’s action-comedy romp. (Rated R) : JEAN WHITESIDE/ABC FAMILY 3 HAPPILY ALI AFTER, by Ali Went- worth In the hilarious follow-up to Ali in BECOMING US BECOMING Wonderland, the actress and comedian takes inspira- tional tweets as self- improvement mantras in an ill-fated quest for happiness as she ap- BECOMING US This touching DJANGO AND JIMMIE, proaches the 4 reality show about Ben, a teenager 2Willie Nelson and Merle age of 50. Her with a transgender parent, captures how Haggard The two legends craft island glass isn’t half much his family is just like everyone else’s— fantasies, swap Johnny Cash stories, and full—it’s even when he goes bra shopping with his tinker with Bob Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice, “empty and parent Carly, who was born Charlie.
    [Show full text]
  • The Love at Stake Series I. the Good Guys
    1 THE LOVE AT STAKE SERIES Cast of Characters (Warning—if you have not read books 1-14, this list could contain spoilers) I. THE GOOD GUYS A. Employees of Romatech Industries (White Plains, NY) Usually about 200 employees work during the day, about 50 employees at night. 1. Roman Draganesti (Vamp and hero of How to Marry a Millionaire Vampire, Book 1) 1461 – Born in Romania (in 2005, he’s 544 years old) 2 older brothers, 1 younger sister who died at age 2. Mother (Sofia) died when he was four. 1466 –Age 5. Given to a monastery, befriended by healer, Father Constantine. 1479 – Age 18. Becomes a monk and traveling healer. 1491 – Age 30. Transformed into a vampire by Casimir and his evil gang. (in 2005, he’s been a vampire for 514 years) 1492—Rebels against Casimir. Casimir destroys the monastery and murders the monks. Roman leaves and begins transforming dying soldiers. 1513—Transforms Jean-Luc Echarpe August 17, 1513 at the Battle of the Spurs. 1513—Transforms Angus MacKay September 9, 1513 at Flodden Field. 1542-- Transforms Connor Buchanan November 25, 1542 at the Battle of Solway Moss. 1710 – Great Vampire War of 1710. Roman’s army battles Casimir and his followers. 1862 – Involved with young, British debutante (Eliza) in London, flees to NYC. 1950 – Elected coven master of East Coast Vampires (term to last 100 years). Lives in a five- story townhouse on the Upper East Side. Starts the Secret Santa Pact. 1982 – Starts Romatech Industries in White Plains, NY, CEO. 1987 – Introduces synthetic cloned blood.
    [Show full text]
  • The Show, Er, Um, Article About Nothing (Other Than SEC, CFTC, FINRA, and State Securities Enforcement Actions in August 2020)
    NSCPCurrents SEPTEMBER 2020 The Show, er, um, Article About Nothing (other than SEC, CFTC, FINRA, and State Securities Enforcement Actions in August 2020) By Brian Rubin and Alexa Shockley About the Authors: Brian Rubin is a partner at Eversheds Sutherland. He can be reached at [email protected]. Alexa Shockley is an associate at Eversheds Sutherland. She can be reached at [email protected]. 1 SEPTEMBER 2020 NSCP CURRENTS 1 SEPTEMBER 2020 NSCP CURRENTS Jerry: So what’s the deal with this article? You’re telling me that Seinfeld, a show about nothing, was really about securities? Elaine: Get out! Kramer: Giddy-up! Jackie Chiles (the most prominent attorney on Seinfeld) (which isn’t saying much): What Mr. Seinfeld and Ms. Benes are saying, with the able assistance of Mr. Kramer, is this: If you watch this super, stellar, stupendous show with care and calculated calibration, but not with callousness, you too will see that reality. Indeed, in fact, indubitably, Ms. Benes will provide an example. Elaine: See, there was one episode called, “The Stock Tip,” and, yada yada yada, Jerry loses his investment, but George makes a killing. Crazy, right? George: Worlds are colliding! Jerry: Yeah, I guess you could say that.1 Everyone knows that Seinfeld, which premiered 31 summers ago, was one of the most popular television sitcoms ever. It was on the airwaves (remember those?) for nine years, nominated for 68 Emmy Awards, winning ten times, including twice for Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series, winning twice.2 It was self-identified as a “show about nothing.”3 Indeed, co-creator Larry David “admonished the writing staff that there would be ‘no hugging, no learning’ in the scripts, and there wasn’t.
    [Show full text]
  • Misguided Regulation of Interchange Fees: the Consumer Impact of the Durbin Amendment Patrick C
    Loyola Consumer Law Review Volume 25 Article 6 Issue 2 Volume 25, Issue 2-3 (2013) 2013 Misguided Regulation of Interchange Fees: The Consumer Impact of the Durbin Amendment Patrick C. McGinnis Follow this and additional works at: http://lawecommons.luc.edu/lclr Part of the Consumer Protection Law Commons Recommended Citation Patrick C. McGinnis Misguided Regulation of Interchange Fees: The Consumer Impact of the Durbin Amendment, 25 Loy. Consumer L. Rev. 285 (2013). Available at: http://lawecommons.luc.edu/lclr/vol25/iss2/6 This Student Article is brought to you for free and open access by LAW eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Loyola Consumer Law Review by an authorized administrator of LAW eCommons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. McGinnisArticleFinal (Do Not Delete) 3/11/2013 5:07 PM MISGUIDED REGULATION OF INTERCHANGE FEES: THE CONSUMER IMPACT OF THE DURBIN AMENDMENT Patrick C. McGinnis I. INTRODUCTION uring a famous episode of Seinfeld, Jerry performs a stand- D up routine about how women prefer to make purchases with checks.1 In contrast, men seem to find checks unmanly, as they are like, “A note from your mother that says, ‘I don’t have any money, but if you contact these people, I’m sure they’ll stick up for me.’”2 This episode aired in 1990 and while this is simply a humorous interpretation of an everyday event, it highlights a period of transition from predominantly using checks for purchases to debit cards. For consumers, debit cards limit liability when a card is stolen, offer easy access
    [Show full text]
  • HEART of the JEDI PDF Versiona.Pdf
    Find other books by Kenneth Flint at: http://www.amazon.com/Kenneth - C. - Flint/e/B001HPFIWC See his author Facebook page at: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Kenneth - C - Flint - Author/295987127198404 Cover art by Paul Shipper. http:// paulshipperstudio.com the heart of the jedi _____ _______ _________ Kenneth C. Flint Gallina Books STAR WARS: THE HEART OF THE JEDI A Gallina Book/ December 2015 ®, TM and © by Kenneth C. Flint and Lucasfilm Ltd. All rights reserved. This PD F version has been produce d for fans free of charge , and is not available for retail sale or distribution. No copyright infringement is intended or implied. Star Wars: The Heart of the Jedi was originally completed on June 23, 1992. This new edition was completed on December 2, 2015, and was published in eight monthly installments on www.starwarstimeline.net. Flint, Kenneth. The Heart of the Jedi/ Kenneth Flint ISBN: N/A I. Title. II. Series: Star Wars (Gallina Books (Firm) 2015 DEDICATION This book is for my two sons, Devin Cormac Flint and Gavin Donal Flint. Devin, now 15, was born the year the first Star Wars was released and has been a loyal fan ever since. I especially wish to ac knowledge his invaluable contributions to the creation of this story. His ideas were most imaginative ones, and I know that someday he will become as fine a writer as he hopes to be. Gavin’s nine - year - old’s imagination also knows no bounds in time and spac e. He has made his own excellent contributions to the writing of this book.
    [Show full text]