Word: mailings
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...hearing examiner for the National Labor Relations Board yesterday heard a third day of testimony in a dispute involving employees of the University's Mail Communications Center...
Among the 15 college students and teen-agers accepted as summer interns in Senator Ted Kennedy's office is a President's daughter: Caroline Kennedy, 16. For three weeks, starting in late July, Caroline will be a "go-fer," sorting mail and operating the autopen that prints Uncle Ted's signature on routine letters. According to Kennedy's press secretary, Dick Drayne, "Interns have a lot of fun. They can go to hearings, onto the floor when the Senator is there, and get to a lot of parties." He added, "and Caroline wants to be treated...
...Oakland and the delay of his TV contract, he has retaliated with a series of economy moves. The 25% discount on A's season tickets has been removed, and half-price family nights at the Oakland Coliseum have been reduced from twelve to four. Players' fan mail goes unanswered because Finley has refused to supply the team with stamps. Now, thanks to an order by Oakland fire officials, Finley will shave his budget even further by discontinuing the Scoreboard fireworks displays. As the pennant race warms up, however, Finley can be counted on to supply his own special...
...office of County Assessor P.J. Cullerton for giving tax breaks to major Democratic Party contributors; lawsuits to open up the Irish-dominated fire department to minority hiring and promotion; and the indictment of the mayor's former director of public relations, Earl Bush, on charges of mail fraud in connection with his secret ownership of a company that operated the display advertising concession at city-owned O'Hare Airport...
...margin, the Senate last week passed a bill that may bring some relief to hard-pressed publishing companies that use second-class mail to deliver newspapers and magazines. Authored by Wyoming's Gale McGee, chairman of the Senate Post Office Committee, and co-sponsored by 22 other Senators including Massachusetts' Edward M. Kennedy and Arizona's Barry Goldwater, the measure would give newspapers and magazines an extra three years to absorb soaring second-class rates (TIME, Feb. 25). Under the present Postal Service schedule of phased increases, periodicals collectively will have to pay at least 218% more...