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...course." Add the usual reasons women have for hesitating to make formal and informal complaints, and one can see why employees as a group are the least likely to speak out. As a result, Cooper and others believe they hear little about the harassment that goes on at schools. Ann Taylor of the Harvard General Counsel's Office says there are very few complaints of harassment made by employees. Unhappily, this is probably not due to a lack of anything to complain about...

Author: By Mark E. Feinberg, | Title: Harassing Employees | 12/12/1983 | See Source »

...Harvard an employee can talk with a supervisor, or with Ginn. or with a neutral officer in Central Personnel, or with the General Counsel's office (Ann Taylor's domain). If a worker is dissatisfied with the results she gets at these levels, she can appeal either to a formal hearing, held under the General Counsel's auspices, or to formal arbitration. A formal arbitration beard is composed of three judges--one chosen by the employee, one by the Dean of the Faculty, and one chosen from among experienced arbitrators in the graduate schools. If all else fails, as with...

Author: By Mark E. Feinberg, | Title: Harassing Employees | 12/12/1983 | See Source »

...California, Berkeley, named by 24 percent of college presidents. Christopher Atkins, we hope you won't recall, stripped for Princeton's Brooke in Blue Lagoon, posed naked with a snake (Nastassia looked better) for a pin-up poster, showed all to Playgirl, and go-go danced for Lesley Ann Warren in his latest flick. A Night in Heaven. At Cal/Berkeley, he could get degree credit for that. Even we could get Cal/Berkeley degree credit for stripping. Need we say more...

Author: By Clark J. Freshman, | Title: Stanford Who? | 12/5/1983 | See Source »

...Ann J. Gould Cranston...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Dec. 5, 1983 | 12/5/1983 | See Source »

Certainly, in middle-class communities, parents are flocking to help out their schools. PTA membership jumped by 70,000 in the past school year, reversing a 20-year decline. Washington State PTA President Mary Ann Laramore notes that four years ago, $3,000 was considered a big budget for a PTA, but today "we're seeing budgets of $10,000 to $12,000." The Smoke Rise Elementary School in the Atlanta suburb of Stone Mountain boasts a lab with 14 Apple II computers, 13 of which were bought by the PTA. The Lafayette parent group in Washington, B.C., which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Why Schools Are Passing the Hat | 12/5/1983 | See Source »

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