Word: filed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...code that has been passed by the island's legislature. Federal law allows U.S. territories to keep tax revenues paid by residents. Guam's code would extend "residency" status to any persons or companies wanting it, regardless of where they reside or do business. Those who file Guamian returns would be rewarded with a 75% tax rebate. Says Senator Edward Calvo, the tax code's author: "Once the multinationals hear about this, our budget worries are over." Well, not really. Federal lawyers are sure to challenge the great Guamian tax caper...
Although all students must file a financial aid form and demonstrate a financial need to qualify for the funds, the regulations will not set a ceiling on incomes for families of those who apply, he added...
Irving S. Shapiro, chairman of E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co. (annual sales: more than $8 billion), says, "It costs the company a lot of time and money to comply with Government reporting requirements." Du Pont has to spend $5 million and 180 man-years of work annually to file 15,000 reports to the Federal Government. Among many other things, the company is held accountable not only for its own programs for hiring and promoting minorities and women, but also for the affirmative action programs of every supplier that sells it more than $2,500 worth of goods...
...cavernous California mountain lodge, some 40 smiling people, their shiny, shaved heads reflecting the dancing flames of a roaring fire, oohed, ahed and applauded. A lawyer had just pledged to file ten divorces for the ten highest bidders at a fund-raising auction on New Year's Eve. At a wooden table a grizzled, gruff man who wears a cap emblazoned with the message I'M THE MEANEST S.O.B. IN THE VALLEY nodded his approval. Charles (Chuck) Dederich, 64, was adding another ritual to his famed commune Synanon: wife swapping...
...wealth create problems of their own. Respectability and riches do not often lead to serious efforts at social reform. Money also creates image problems for revivalists like Oral Roberts, who thinks his finances are nobody's business, and Graham, who only this year for the first time decided to file open financial statements for his national program...