Word: employments
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...amendment that prompted affirmative action in universities, however. It was President Lyndon B. Johnson's Executive Order 11246, which now, after many amendments and additions by HEW, requires all federal contractors, including universities, to have a written plan explaining how they will overcome past discrimination. "Affirmative action requires the employer to make additional efforts to recruit, employ and promote qualified members of groups formerly excluded, even if that exclusion cannot be traced to particular discriminatory actions on the part of the employer," the order states...
...road" during campaigns. (Nixon, as President, assigned that job to Spiro Agnew.) But when Ike was asked in 1960, "What major decisions has your Vice President participated in?" he replied: "If you give me a week, I might think of one." John Kennedy tried, at least initially, to employ Lyndon Johnson effectively. Kennedy saw to it that Johnson presided over National Security Council meetings, appointed him to head the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity and the National Aeronautics and Space Council, and sent him off to squeeze palms and slap backs in 33 countries. Yet Johnson began...
Nicholson can employ his rough, warming charm to get himself through a bumpy scene or an insufficient part, but he is usually a careful and thorough craftsman. "He simply doesn't care about the way he looks," says Director Roman Polanski. "I put a bandage on his nose during half of Chinatown, and he didn't object. With Jack, it's only the result that counts." Indeed, for Fortune he gets a weekly permanent to keep his hair Art Garfunkel-style kinky...
Since such modern equipment requires fewer and less skilled operators, it offers publishers great economies. Small wonder, then, that 1,050 of the nation's 1,774 dailies now employ some form of automated printing. As a rule, full-time printers have not been fired; some have been retrained, and the work forces have diminished by attrition...
...great blow to free trade-all to help out the politically powerful shipbuilders and maritime unions. The Energy Transportation Security Act would require that by 1977 30% of the nation's oil imports be carried in tankers that are built in the U.S., fly the U.S. flag and employ American sailors. Because such ships cost much more to build and operate than foreign vessels, almost no imported oil is carried in them now. Indeed, to meet the bill's requirements, the capacity of the nation's tanker fleet would have to be dramatically enlarged, costing billions...