Word: junes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Although he had planned to attend Cambridge University in England, Nayar applied to Harvard when he learned that entrance requirements would delay his entrance to Cambridge for a year. He submitted his application in June, 1965, and was accepted in July...
...audit was based on questionnaires returned by 40 per cent of the Fine Arts concentrators who graduated last June, and by 25 per cent of this year's concentrators. It was prepared by a committee of two H-RPC members and two concentrators in the department...
...SURCHARGE. The chairman sees no escape from continuing the levy. If Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon had not agreed in January to extend the 10% income tax surcharge beyond June 30, said Mills, "President Nixon would have had, within 30 days of taking office, a very intolerable situation. We possibly could have been back even further than we were in the fall of 1967, when people began to doubt our dollar, when people began to wonder whether or not we were being good stewards of our trust. Had its extension not been recommended, in my opinion, you would have...
...regime had taken the first, cautious step toward political liberalization last June with the proclamation of a new constitution. The document provided for elections within 240 days, but it also safeguarded the Thanom government by stipulating that no-confidence motions could only come from a majority of members of the upper and lower houses. Such a negative vote would be unlikely, to say the least, since the upper house is entirely appointed by the regime. Said Opposition Leader Seni Pramoj, an articulate and outspoken lawyer who was Premier in 1945-46: "The constitution of 1968 almost achieves immortality...
...view of the continued buoyancy of the economy, Nixon will have to extend the 10% surcharge well beyond its scheduled June 30 expiration date and resist various pressures for costly new Government spending programs, even when the Viet Nam war finally ends. For its part, the Federal Reserve will have to avoid the stop-and-go policies that in the past have produced sharp, erratic swings in the money supply and have brought criticism from some economists. The need is to show, as George W. Mitchell, one of the Federal Reserve's seven governors, puts it, that "we mean...