Word: warns
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...tensions are caused mainly by the competition for scarce commodities and even scarcer jobs. Inside the camps, to discourage refugees from seeking work, loudspeakers daily warn them not to go into the villages. It is perhaps the sorest point with local residents, who say that the refugees will work for one rupee (130) a day when the local rate is between 21 and three rupees. Farm laborers, shop assistants and other workers recently demonstrated in the farming district of Nadia, asking local employers not to hire refugees. Residents also complain that the price of kerosene, vegetables and other foods...
...intensity of anger and restiveness among the nation's farmers than Iowa Republican Congressman William J. Scherle, 48. A husky (6 ft. 3 in., 249 lbs.) feed-grain and livestock farmer from a diversified agricultural area near the Missouri River, the three-term Congressman has vainly tried to warn the Nixon Administration about its political vulnerability in the Midwest. He expressed his frustration last week to TIME Correspondent Jess Cook...
...Justice Department, negotiated commission rates will almost surely have to be extended to cover trades of less than $500,000. Regional stock exchanges and the "third market" of off-the-floor trading in listed shares are gaining volume at the expense of the two major exchanges. Some brokers warn that if computerized trading systems like one introduced this year by the National Association of Securities Dealers are expanded, major stock exchanges may no longer be needed...
University officials had anticipated a possible disruption and had prepared a statement to warn the protesters. Richard Slater, vice president and university provost, read the statement to the students...
Some opponents of rapid reform make telling points. They warn that the trend toward group medicine will prevent rather than encourage a re-establishment of warm doctor-patient relationships. The growing tendency in some schools to stress the humanistic aspects of medicine at the expense of scientific studies worries many of the profession's leaders. "This attitude goes beyond anti-science," cautions Glen Leymaster, director of undergraduate education for the A.M.A. "It surfaces in the form of anti-intellectualism. Medical schools today need more science, not less." U.C.L.A.'s Dr. William Longmire Jr. shares that concern. Says...