Word: hiked
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...rankings; of cancer; in Hobe Sound, Fla. "The Old Head," as his boys called him, forged Choate in his image; strongly Episcopal in his insistence on compulsory chapel, staunchly ethical in his devotion to the honor system, fresh and human in his habit of occasionally dismissing classes for a hike in the mountains. John F. Kennedy was one of the graduates who remembered his frequent exhortation: "Ask not what your school can do for you, but what you can do for your school...
...happened, Kennedy himself found the guidelines little more than a handy thing to mention in State of the Union speeches. The guidelines had hardly anything to do with his successful though costly battle to make U.S. Steel roll back an announced $6-per-ton across-the-board price hike in 1962. On that memorable occasion, Kennedy simply felt that he had been double-crossed by U.S. Steel Chairman Roger Blough, and he lost his Irish temper...
...would cost $680 million, or one-fifth of the entire New York City budget. It did not make its first counteroffer to Quill's demand until a bare seven hours before the strike. It then offered a $25 million package, a 3.2% increase that hit exactly the wage-hike guidelines laid down by President Johnson. As a result, Johnson, who had criticized a steel-price increase early last week, was criticized for refusing to step into the New York situation even though Quill's outlandish demands went miles beyond his guidelines. Quill's reaction to the Transit...
...Summons. The nation's second largest steel company, Bethlehem is the leader in structural shapes, with 38% of production. But structural steel itself comprises a mere 7% of total production-and Bethlehem's hike would have added only one-fourth of 1% to the Government's steel price index. Moreover, Bethlehem pointed out, because of new, stronger, lighter structural steels, construction users now pay less than they did five years ago for equivalent jobs...
...wire-service reporter had learned of the hike from Union sources in London, but the Union decision had been so sudden and quiet even within the company that executives, asked for corroboration over the weekend, denied any knowledge of it. The denial made no difference. Whether because it wished to re-emphasize its position as a pace-setting copper producer or because of some genteel arrangement whereby it drew the task of moving first, Union had decided on a price hike. Within two days, companies in two other large copper-producing countries, Chile (560,000 tons annually) and Zambia...