Word: filed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Making new cards with a different color would not change the problem, he said, because the OFS would still have to use its name and address file, which caused the initial inaccuracies...
...September 31, Frisoli appeared at a council meeting with his proposal that all councilors be required to file detailed records of their personal finances, as well as civil and criminal dockets, with the city clerk. The council had been recently debating whether a similar requirement could be made on a city treasurer who had somehow run up more than $25,000 worth of gambling debts. Frisoli was angered that the council members could require disclosure of one of their subordinates, but not of themselves. The meeting adjourned without even considering Frisoli's plan...
...thought he could count on $98-a-week unemployment compensation, to which the Illinois Bureau of Employment Security said he was entitled. But for five months the IBES failed to send him so much as a dime. Since his wife Mary Anne's earnings as a file clerk do not cover much more than food for the family of five, the Quinns' electricity and phone bills went unpaid, and both services were cut off. Finally, on Aug. 8, Quinn got checks for $1,938 of the $3,212 that the IBES owed him. Since then, there has been...
...Post does not seem anxious to have them back. Although the strike is costing the paper as much as $100,000 a day in lost advertising and extra logistical expenses, Meagher has been arguing for the company's "right to publish," and he plans to file a civil suit for damages against the employees who trashed the presses. Although the American Newspaper Guild is insisting that the editorial employees should join the other unions in supporting the strike, the Post unit of the Guild has voted 270 to 251 not to do so. A number of journalists say they...
This fear of arousing antagonism is echoed in Harrington's stand vis-a-vis the trade unions While indicating his wariness of "left-wing outside-agitator-inspired wildcats," he concedes that there are instances, for example in the Lordstown auto plants, of genuine rank-and-file worker disenchantment with union leadership and a real desire on the part of workers to participate in the organization of the work process. "And I supported that strike," Harrington says. "But we're in a tough position. It's the same thing in New York, where the civil servants crossed the teachers' picket lines...