Word: willard
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Shortage in the Market. The idea of tinkering with the tax credit worries many businessmen, if only because plant expansion often requires decisions on spending two or three years ahead of the actual outlays. "Tax and depreciation incentives created the boom in the first place," said Chairman Willard F. Rockwell of Pittsburgh's Rockwell-Standard Corp. "If they cut down the investment credit they'll be in a slump much faster than they expect...
Arriving in Japan with four other U.S. Cabinet members to attend the fifth annual Cabinet-level conference of the two governments, Secretary of Labor Willard Wirtz, 54, and his wife Mary left the rest of the gang at the doors of their Western-style rooms in Kyoto's elegant Miyako Hotel and headed for the Japanese wing. Beds are all very comfy at home, but when in Japan do as the ... A thin tatami mat, please, and they couldn't be more comfortable stretched right out there on the floor. "It feels wonderful and is very good...
They have been spurred by publicity about the Government's campaigns to help them find work. Under federal sponsorship, such personalities as Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz, Astronaut Frank Borman and Mickey Mantle are making televised appeals to businessmen to hire young people. Disturbed that few companies are eager to hire unseasoned or draft-eligible workers, the Government has ordered federal agencies to take on one temporary employee this summer for every hundred regulars on the roll. The program is paying off. Of the 1,000,000 teen-agers searching for summer work, at least two-thirds should find...
...addition to Greene, the speakers included: Willard Uphays, director of World Fellowship, Inc.; Bradford Lyttie, chairman of the New England Committee for Non-Violent Action; Neam Chousky professor of Linguistics at M.I.T.: Edwin Moise, professor of Mathematics and Education at Harvard; and John Gerassi, author of The Great Fear in Latin America...
Costlier Mortgages. The Johnson Administration has nearly achieved its goal of full employment, but is baffled by the new set of problems that it has brought. Now that unemployment has edged below 4%, Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz warned last week that the U.S. "is about to face a quite serious manpower problem." That has its good side: Negroes now find it much easier to land production-line jobs in the South, and unemployment has ceased to be the headache it was for all kinds of workers just a few months ago in Los Angeles, Seattle and Boston...