Word: file
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...labor's internecine wars in the '30s, came as a grisly epilogue. His career had been built on his crusading efforts to prove that the union's entrenched leadership had for years been a party to "sweetheart" contracts and other schemes to hold down rank-and-file wages in exchange for cumshaw from grateful contractors...
...Faculty voted yesterday to have instructors file reports on unsatisfactory midterm grades of upperclassmen in large-enrollment courses...
...campus that "will seem small as it grows large." Right now, it seems only too small. While dormitories for Cowell near completion, students are jammed eight to each 58-ft. trailer, where, says one, "If you don't like your roommates, it's sheer hell." They file in long lines past a trailer steam kitchen to load cafeteria trays, eat in a field house. But the administration building is finished, classes are being held in the natural sciences building, and a second college, named for Adlai E. Stevenson, will open next fall...
...other jobs and poured them into the riot-torn streets. To get as much of the inside story as possible, the paper turned a Negro advertising salesman into a reporter who provided a graphic eyewitness account. Times-men in other parts of the U.S. and abroad were alerted to file stories on the reaction to the turmoil. A Times reporter in Athens interviewed vacationing California Governor Pat Brown. Once Watts calmed down, Timesmen were sent back to search out the causes of the riots. Their combined labor produced a thoughtful seven-part series that was later published in booklet form...
...Wall Street terminology - and by the legally enforced standards of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission-is anyone who, by reason of being an officer, director or major stockholder of a corporation, can get advance information that might affect the firm's stocks. Thus insiders are required to file regular reports of their stock purchases with the SEC; the commission closely scrutinizes such reports to make sure that the insiders have not profited by information unavailable to outsiders, meaning the general public...