Word: redressing
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...Justices also unanimously decided that federal civilian employees must rely on the "elaborate remedial system" of the civil service for redress of alleged arbitrary and illegal actions. They ruled against NASA Engineer William Bush, who claimed that he had been demoted in retaliation for his public complaints about the agency's management. Although the Civil Service Commission's appeals review board awarded Bush back pay and reinstatement, he sued his boss for damages for denying his right to free speech. In rejecting his appeal, the court noted that Bush had already been compensated for the injustice. Richard Redenius...
...majority editorial failed to put proper weight on the latter: It seriously underestimated the gravity of McCloy's denial of requests to bomb Auschwitz, his key role in the removal and internment of the entire West Coast Japanese American population during World War II, and his present outspokenness against redressing the wrongs committed against the internees. McCloy's failings with respect to the internment and redress issue alone argue against honoring him with a fellowship--but it is this very issue which The Crimson editorial and other articles, and the public as a whole, have grossly underrated, showing a lack...
...particular accomplishments, so much more than the Crimson majority editorial has considered. Because of the testimony McCloy gave at the Commission hearings and his recent article in The New York Times, the "McCloy Scholars' Program" will come to stand for his intolerable position supporting the internment and opposing any redress, rather than his accomplishments in Germany 35 years...
Reagan may not have a racist bone in his body, as his aides insist, but his philosophical antipathy to federal activism, whether it takes the form of social spending or statutory redress, is at odds with the kind of government leadership that blacks have come to expect. His budget cuts were felt most immediately by the nation's poor, who are disproportionately black. He flirted with the idea of weakening the Voting Rights Act until a political fire storm changed his mind, and until recently was criticized for lax enforcement of fair housing laws. William Bradford Reynolds, the Assistant...
...would be unjust to look to the professors--or even to the personnel of Buildings and Grounds--to redress the slovenliness of Harvard's plant, and especially of the poor bedragled Yard. Those who scream loudest about the environment usually care about their own collectivity, and wire barriers and trash gardens and lawns of Oxford and Cambridge...