Word: exceedingly
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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What the Blazes. In arguing for the raise, sympathetic M.P.s made the point that the Queen performs her extensive state duties with skill, dignity and without the slightest hint of indiscretion. "The total cost of all aspects of the monarchy." said the Chancellor of the Exchequer, "does not much exceed the cost of the embassy in Washington." Some Laborites, however, objected to voting the increase at a time when nearly 1,000,000 Britons are out of work and the government is trying to hold union wage demands to 5%. Mainly, the dissenters concentrated their fire on the raises...
...Auto sales are heading for a record-high 10.2 million or more units this year, including imports. Detroit's manufacturers expect to match or exceed that total next year, and to sell proportionately more domestic cars because of the shift in currency-exchange rates. Retiring General Motors Chairman James Roche predicts 1972 sales of between 10.5 and 11 million units. The manufacturers plan to produce a high total of 2.4 million U.S. cars in next year's first quarter. That rate of output should eliminate the industry's traditional midwinter layoffs and create more overtime and fatter...
...same wage adjustment. Thus the boss is perfectly free to grant 10% pay raises to secretaries and only 1% increases to cleaning women, provided that their wage levels have been generally set as part of a single agreement in the past and the combined total does not exceed the guideline. Some union pay increases-and those of nonunion employees that traditionally are granted at the same time-will doubtless continue to exceed the guideline for a while. Labor Secretary James Hodgson admitted as much last week by noting that the Administration fully expected to "swallow" a few extra large settlements...
...Miller saw no reason to turn any inmates loose, but they did order important reforms. A Patuxent prisoner threatened with solitary confinement must henceforth get a hearing before a "relatively impartial" panel. The solitary cells must have adequate light, ventilation and sanitary facilities, and stays in solitary must not exceed 15 days. The court also ruled that institution officials were failing to make an effort to rehabilitate some inmates. One of the prisoners' lawyers, Julian Tepper of the National Law Office in Washington, D.C., believes that the verdict establishes a convict's nascent right to rehabilitation that will...
Perhaps not, but neither the wage nor price decisions of Phase II's first two weeks provide much cause for celebration. There is justification of sorts for early adjustments that exceed the Administration's yardstick: some involve hardship cases and contracts that became binding before Phase II began. But what the public desperately wants to see-and what the President's pay and price officials must provide-are some tough decisions that measure up to the yardstick...