Word: aaa
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Board may once again find itselfimmersed in controversial policy issues. Somealumni favoring divestment are working toreinvigorate the Board by forcing it to considerissues of political import. Saying the overseersrepresent a chance for democracy in the governanceof Harvard, a group calling themselves AlumniAgainst Apartheid (AAA) will this week submitpetitions to get a slate of pro-divestmentcandidates on this year's overseers ballot...
This year AAA plans to run a full slate of sixcandidates for the Board. (A resignation hasopened up one more spot on the Board, wheremembers usually serve for six years.) Thesecandidates bring impressive resumes as well as apro-divestment position to the race. They are: NewYork City Councilor Ruth Messenger '62. ConsulWashington, counsel to the House Committee onEnergy and commerce, Peter D. Wood '64, aprofessor of history at Duke University, VictorSidel, a physician and social activist, JeromeGrossman '38, an activist for liberal causes andMassachusetts businessman, and Harold Burns, viceprovost of the City College of New York...
...been more than 30 years since the Boardand the corporation have stood in direct conflict,as they would on the divestment issue if AAA hadits way. When Warburg professor of EconomicsEmeritus John Kenneth Galbraith's tenurenomination arrived on the overseers, desks, theBoard balked saying he was communist. Although theproposed tenure had been successfully sent throughnormal channels, awaiting only the Board'scustomary approval, members agreed to exercisetheir long-standing right to deny facultyappointments. The administration was appalled...
...decades the term junk bonds referred primarily to the downgraded securities of companies that had run into financial trouble. Standard & Poor's, the investment-research firm, classifies junk bonds as those rating lower than BBB on a scale of AAA to D. Few prudent investors wanted to touch such securities until the 1970s, when a young Drexel investment banker named Michael Milken began touting them as a good deal. He contended that their high yields, typically 3% to 5% above those of U.S. Treasury bonds, were extremely attractive, since junk bonds had historically gone into default only slightly oftener than...
Contacting low-income, inner-city Asians, answering their questions about Harvard and encouraging them to apply to Harvard compose the core of the AAA admissions committee's work, says committee co-chairman David...