Word: higher
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...owner of a small lithography shop in Indianapolis, for sticking with old-fashioned techniques. After he became a lithographer himself, the younger Swayduck saw technological changes-rotary instead of flatbed presses, metal instead of stone plates, new color-printing techniques-lead to more and more jobs for lithographers at higher and higher pay (now $125 to $200 for a 35-hour week). Convinced that unions ought to promote higher productivity, not resist it, Swayduck has fought the featherbedding that made many a printshop worker resemble, in Swayduck's words, "the guy in the orchestra who waits for two hours...
...Bank-IMF meeting noted that the U.S. is "gaining in the battle of inflation," but stressed "the continuing vigil we must keep to attain economic growth along with, and based on, sound money." Federal Reserve Chairman William McChesney Martin warned that nations yielding to inflation "will not have a higher standard of living but a lower...
Berelson, who has been director of the Ford Foundation's behavioral sciences program, will consider the objectives, standards, and functions of the graduate schools in the American system of higher education. He will make a broad review of the history of graduate education and its institutions in order to locate and interpret major trends and active issues...
Questioning him about the problems facing higher education in the United States will be: Miss Terry Ferrer, Education Editor of the New York Heraid-Tribune; Leon Pearson, NBC news commentator; Richard Wilson, Washington correspondent of the Cowles newspapers, and Lawrence Spivak, producer and regular panelist of the program...
...biggest drum, two inches higher than the one used for the Cornell game, is in Chicago, undergoing repairs for the Ohio game...