Word: annually
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...midst of a $130 million expansion program, Oklahoma expects to grow from 15,500 to 25,000 students by 1975. Thanks to Cross's concern for good student-administration relations, O.U. has been relatively free of campus disorder, except before the annual football game with archrival Texas...
...means to satisfy the teachers. In the past four years, for example, the operating budget of Philadelphia's archdiocesan secondary school system, which serves 59,000 pupils, has risen from $4,500,000 to $8,500,000. New building needs, plus the recent teacher settlement, which resulted in annual salary increases of from $300 to $1,000, threaten to create a $1,000,000 deficit in the next school year...
...Islam. Potentially, the most fruitful ground for discussion, ecumenists suggest, is not theology but the search for common religious solutions to pressing worldly problems. A notable advocate of this approach is the Benedictine monastery of Toumliline, in Morocco's Middle Atlas mountains, which for eleven years has sponsored annual meetings of Moslem and Christian thinkers from dozens of countries. The sessions deal broadly and impartially with major contemporary themes, such as the problems of youth and cities. Purpose of the meetings is to encourage Islam to face these issues from the perspective of its own traditions. Says the monastery...
...accounts-Boodle's Gin from Britain, Bristol-Myers' Score hair preparations and the General Mills nibbles called Bugles, Whistles and Daisy's. Last week it snared another: an as yet unnamed Scotch to be marketed by Calvert. With total of 14 clients worth $52 million in annual billings so far, the 14-month-old shop has been publicized into the ranks of the nation's 50 biggest agencies. Mary Wells is certain that billings will rise to $100 million in a couple of years, even though "we don't -and never have-solicited accounts...
...world's sixth bout of tariff reductions since World War II-and it far surpassed earlier efforts. The 1962 Dillon Round achieved 8% reductions in customs duties on $5 billion a year of global trade. Last week's accord covered eight times as much: $40 billion in annual trade in 60,000 farm and factory items. Chief U.S. Negotiator William M. Roth called the result "of tremendous world importance...