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According to Austin, Dean May's Committee on Co-residency last spring was aware of the impracticability of placing so few women in each House, although May's Four-Year Plan would have eventually entailed that distribution...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: May Throws Coed Living Back Into Committee's Lap | 12/5/1970 | See Source »

Genevieve Austin, Radcliffe dean of residence, said that it will not be possible to increase the number of Radcliffe women living in the Houses to more than 100, because of the need to maintain a "favorable balance" of upper-class women living in the Quad. "Spreading 400 women thinly among nine Houses averages to 44 women per House-not a very healthy balance," Austin said...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: May Throws Coed Living Back Into Committee's Lap | 12/5/1970 | See Source »

...progress of the document has been slow. Its authors, Professors Francis M. Bator and Graham T. Allison, even now insist that they have only drafted a preliminary paper-"to fix an agenda" for debating possible guidelines for portfolio and budget analysis in the dark fiscal days ahead. The Austin Committee on Corporate Enterprise, appointed by President Pusey last April during the GM proxy fight, has done that much less work. But Harvard urgently demands a full and immediate discussion of these topics. By remaining so noncommittal, by shying off from premature conclusions, by proposing on the one hand and rejecting...

Author: By Thomas Geoghegan, | Title: The Politics of Money | 12/3/1970 | See Source »

With Spiro Agnew and Martha Mitchell on the same bill, last week's $150-a-plate G.O.P. "Salute to the Vice President" in Washington's Sheraton Park Hotel promised lively political entertainment. TIME Correspondent John Austin, who attended along with 1,100 other guests, wrote this review...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: And Now, the Spiro and Martha Show | 11/23/1970 | See Source »

...Brain proposes combining this important medical evidence with modern sociological interpretations of violence. This approach to the problem should encourage both criminologists and medical personnel to integrate their fields. There is no question that today such an approach is desperately wanting. Several weeks before climbing a tower in Austin, Texas, from which he murdered 17 people by rifle, Charles Whitman had gone to a psychiatrist and spoken of doing just that. After Whitman was killed, autopsy revealed a brain tumor-easily detectable by a simple medical procedure...

Author: By Jerry T. Nepom, | Title: Books Violence and the Brain | 11/21/1970 | See Source »

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