Word: hires
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...governor--an office that has the patronage necessary to nourish the party organism. He does not want to run, as he cannot "see the obligation." But he refuses to make a categorical disclaimer. Clearly his uncertainty comes from a fear that unless the moderates set the policy and hire the servants, 1964 might be repeated...
...only increase the number of well-qualified women teachers," she asserted, "there are enough colleges that will employ them in good positions." Even now, institutions that are reluctant to hire women are showing occasional signs of relenting, she added...
...sidestepped California's hottest state issue: repeal of the Rumford Act against racial discrimination in housing (TIME, Sept. 25). In agricultural areas, Murphy wins votes for his stand favoring the bracero program, under which fruit and vegetable farmers hire immigrant labor from Mexico. "You have to remember," explains Murphy, "that Americans can't do that kind of work. It's too hard. Mexicans are really good at that. They are built low to the ground, you see, so it is easier for them to stoop...
Goodman's new book is particularly vehement about Harvard. Since the "Organized System" is a "strict top to bottom affair," the University sets a pattern in which grades and other extrinsic determine "who to accept, reward, hire." The archetype of the alienated kid is the guy who "'does' Bronx High to 'make' Harvard and 'does' Harvard to 'make...
...other, it backed away from using the same clause to bring state criminal-law procedures up to Bill of Rights standards. In the 1942 case of Belts v. Brady, for example, the Court upheld the robbery conviction of a jobless Maryland farm hand who had been too poor to hire a lawyer. The Sixth Amendment's guarantee of the right to counsel applies only in federal courts, said the Court, ruling that states need furnish indigents with lawyers only in "shocking" circumstances...