Word: paye
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Election Commission turned down the offer of the Cambridge Neighborhood Committee on Vietnam to pay the printing costs of 1,000 absentee referendum ballots at a meeting yesterday with Robert J. Reinstein, office manager of the referendum campaign...
...kept the ball on Harvard's half of the field, but time after time the Crimson defense warded off Dartmouth scoring threats. Harvard's Parker Wise--who left a trail of green jerseys wherever he roamed--choked off a Dartmouth sweep with a vicious tackle about 5 yards from pay-dirt...
...Yourself Kit. It was a blatant bit of buckpassing. Moreover, only a week earlier the House had passed a pay increase for civilian employees that was more generous than the Administration had requested. That bill singled out the postal workers, who have the most powerful civil service lobby, for a larger raise than other groups and denied employees of the Office of Economic Opportunity any raise at all. Many of the most economy-minded Congressmen protested when the Administration recently imposed temporary freezes on certain construction projects. In the course of a six-hour debate last week, members loyal...
...clear that he, has little faith in Albertz's plan to rebuild West Berlin prosperity by turning the city into a center for trade and cultural exchange between East and West. Not that he is against "building bridges," said Schütz, but he is unwilling to pay the price the Communists demand for their cooperation. The East Germans want West Berlin turned into a "Free City" without ties to West Germany and without the protection of an Allied military presence. "West Berlin must not go off half-cocked," said its new boss. "Berlin's economy and jobs...
...week the pressures in the U.S. money market led the Bank of England to raise its interest rate from 5½% to 6%, hoping thus to stem a flow of funds toward the U.S. Though the British move steadied the sagging pound, it means that businessmen will have to pay more for loans to finance new plants and that consumers will pay more for installment purchases. Both consequences will tend to slow Britain's recovery from recession. Continental bankers predicted that the British action will lift the cost of short-term borrowing, but voiced guarded confidence that other European...