Word: employers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...sense, a purely partisan, leftist movement was converted into a city-centered mass movement against the allegedly anti-parliamentarian attitude of the Kishi cabinet. The main argument was that the government had refused to deliberate further on the treaty, but had resorted to a direct action, even daring to employ the police within the Diet building. The Socialists, too, had used force, but this was considered a lesser offense to parliamentarianism than the acts of the government. The demonstrators demanded the resignation of the prime minister and the dissolution of the Diet, so that public opinion could be heard anew...
Intentions count for nothing: France must find a solution, but it cannot find one; de Gaulle must resolve the situation if he is not to fall, but any means he can employ today would destroy his government. France has acted creditably and in reasonably good faith with its other possessions, but they represented soluble problems, and Algeria does...
...Student companies should make all efforts, within reason, to employ to the fullest the unique and extra-ordinary machinery with which the stage is equipped, not merely to demonstrate its wonders but in order to discover if and how the values of basic dramas may be enhanced by such machinery...
...report pointed out that large universities often have low salary-per-student figures because they hold big classes and employ many part-time instructors at comparatively low salaries. The AAUP considered only full-time faculty members in rating overall compensation scales...
...facts: in 1958, under Republican (and Protestant) Governor C. William O'Neill, Ohio Attorney General William B. Saxbe was asked to rule whether school boards could employ nuns to ease a grave teacher shortage. He ruled that they could indeed hire nuns (as they have been doing for 39 years), allow them to wear habits in class. Said Democratic (and Catholic) Governor Mike DiSalle, demanding an apology from Peale: "This matter has never been before...