Word: exceed
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...recommendations are: 1) transitional retirement from the age of 66 to 70 in place of the present automatic retirement at 66, 2) scholarships for faculty children equal to the tuition of the college they attend and not to exceed Harvard's tuition, 3) sickness and accident insurance for the entire faculty and their immediate families contingent upon the approval of two-thirds of the faculty, 4) the extension of University Health Service facilities to the faculty (but not faculty families) on a voluntary basis, and 5) various minor recommendations...
...special donations from 25-year campaigns were accepted. For $10,000 a graduate could dedicate, with a bronze plaque, one of the book-collection alcoves to the memory of a relative. The College also took the reunion gifts from the Classes of 1921, 1922, and 1923 using them to exceed the original $1,500,000 goal by several hundred thousand dollars...
URANIUM BOOM will exceed all estimates, predicts Henry C. Anderson, planning manager for General Electric's atomic-power department. By 1975 atom-powered electric plants will be consuming 22,150 tons of uranium annually. Amount of ore required: 9,000,000 tons, several times current production...
...anxiously watching the zooming expenditures for plant expansion, increasing business inventories, the high levels of mortgage and retail credit-all potential inflationary spots in 1956's economy. Yet, said he, there are still some businessmen clamoring for fewer Government credit controls every time "sales do not exceed expectations or fail to set a record." For 1956 the need was for tighter, not looser reins on inflation through the FRB's checks on bank reserves and interest rates. Said Martin: "If it were possible to have good times without controls, then we could go along without change...
...debts, and $44 million for "General Development "without, says Shwadran, providing any "clue as to whether it was for wealth-producing projects or some capricious projects of the King's." Shwadran believes that the actual sums dispensed in gifts to princelings and subsidies to sheiks vastly exceed these airy estimates...