Word: benefited
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
With the two sides expected to resume their talks this week, bargaining will have to start almost from scratch. Still on the table is a two-week-old Ford offer that would raise wages and benefits by about 4% in each of the next three years; wages would go up by 130 an hour the first year, about 110 an hour during each of the next two. That would gradually raise the typical Ford worker's weekly base pay, at present $146, to about $160. The U.A.W. has called for annual wage-benefit increases of 6%, which would boost...
Many victims got no benefit from the hospital's well-equipped, well-staffed intensive-care unit, because one of every four was dead on arrival...
...associations to an emergency conference to discuss the bill. Dr. Calvin Brainard, professor of finance and insurance at the University of Rhode Island, and a former insurance underwriter, submitted a 71-page report on Keeton's scheme to the Trial Lawyers Association. Brainard argued that the new plan would benefit bad drivers and that it would not reduce rates...
...volunteers. "I'm a bit cynical about mine," said a girl who described herself as a model, "because it's worth money." The director was Miss Yoko Ono, 34, a Tokyo-born artist-composer and currently an entrepreneur of happenings in London. The premiere was a benefit for Britain's Institute of Contemporary Arts, a prestigious public patron headed by eminent Art Philosopher Sir Herbert Read. But the point of it all was lost on most Londoners. Sales of the opening-night tickets ($4.20 top) were so slow that many had to be given away. The most...
...GROUP LEGAL SERVICES. Occasionally mislabeled group practice, group legal services are services made available by for example, a union or club as a benefit of membership. But the A.B.A. code of ethics bars them, on the ground that "the professional services of a lawyer should not be controlled or exploited by any lay agency, personal or corporate, which intervenes between client and lawyer." In a convention debate, backers of such services pointed out that they would make legal assistance possible for people who could not otherwise fully afford it. Replied Pennsylvania Attorney Andrew Hourigan Jr., chairman of the A.B.A. committee...