Word: annelies
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...women and would definitely not be able to do so should it remain single. In December's Radcliffe Quarterly three graduate students trace the history of Radcliffe and reveal a consistently conservative attitude on Radcliffe's part when it comes to pressing Harvard for female equal opportunity. According to Ann N .Michelini '60, Co-chairman of the Graduate Women's Organization, "The existence of Radcliffe as a separate, but completely dependent institution has been repeatedly used by Harvard as a protective barrier against admitting women equally to the advantages men students enjoy. At present, Radcliffe is still being used...
...What worries us most," Ann N. Michelini '60, co-chairman of the Graduate Women's Organization said, "is the attempt to freeze the issue for four years." Many undergraduates express similar fears. They feel that Harvard is postponing the equal admissions issue until 1975 when the contract can be renewed. Many students want the issues of merger and equal admissions to be of immediate concern to the new President. The final report, however, disagrees: "The new Harvard President will be faced with many critical problems at the outset of his administration and it is not in the best interests...
...Ann Michelini, a member of the Graduate Women's Organization, said that women at Harvard are skeptical of Harvard's plans until the actual figures are released...
...demanding immediate withdrawal from Southeast Asia. In the back of the room, on the right, you could get a slice of baloney or American cheese between two pieces of bread for thirty-five cents, or get a coke for a quarter. People were starting to get pissed. "Shit, in Ann Arbor, they had all this stuff free, they didn't try to rip you off. That was a real people's conference...
...letter to President Pusey yesterday, Ann Michelini and Phyllis Jones, Co-Chairmen of the Graduate Women's Organization (GWO), said: "The University's unwillingness to be convinced [of the need for day care] by meetings and letters and reports seems to have made it clear that only radical, public, and embarrassing pressure will convince them that a need exists...