Word: faired
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...naturally adversarial interests of landlords and tenants. Fifteen years of regulation have maintained rents at approximately two-and-a-half times those of 1967, an increase which is slightly less than the increase in the consumer price index. This increase can recover normal operating costs and maintain a fair profit in most cases...
...appeal body nor give students innappropriate authority over University employees. Let grievances against non-students be pursued first through existing channels--just as complaints against students will go first to the Administrative Board--but give complainants, whoever they are, the recourse of appealing to a committee bound to follow fair procedures...
...authority of administrators nor involve the committee in judgments that are substantively different from those they would make in cases where the accused happen to be students. It would, however, indicate that students at Harvard also have rights as well as responsibilities and would finally assure them of a fair hearing for their grievances...
Take, for instance, former Delaware Governor Pierre S. Dupont IV, who recently declared his candidacy for the 1988 Republican presidential nomination. It seems fair to assume that he used his announcement speech to express his vision of an America under a Dupont Administration. If that's so, his vision is an ugly and ignorant...
...ordinance passed last year in San Fransisco prohibits random urine-testing except when an employer has reasonable suspicion that a specific individual is a substance abuser who also threatens the safety of his co-workers. That's a fair law, because its writers understood that those who have nothing to hide because they have nothing to fear lack also one other thing. Even if they're candidates for public office, they also have nothing to prove...