Word: bachelors
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...LARGE number of Harvard graduates, that means law school or its moral equivalent. In the current job market, a 22 year-old with a Bachelor's degree in a social science does not have a lot of options. Law, business, and public relations pay a lot for these people--few other careers will. In 1982, the average Harvard Law School graduate starting with a law firm received roughly $40,000 for his first year. Harvard students with Bachelor's Degrees entering the private sector that year took about $20,000. Those heading to government or public service were paid between...
Worner had reported that eyewitness accounts obtained in a special investigation by German army intelligence agents proved that Kiessling, a bachelor, had long frequented gay bars in Cologne. Un der German law, however, homosexuality is not sufficient cause for dismissing officers. Worner justified his action by arguing that Kiessling had denied his homosexual tendencies; if Kiessling was homosexual and sought to conceal the fact, he would be liable to blackmail...
Lewis blames the low number of tenured professors on the lack of qualified Ph.D.s in the field. He explains that because the computer science industry offers such challenging and lucrative jobs to those with just Bachelor's degrees--starting salaries are often as high as $30,000--that few go to graduate school...
Kiessling. a bachelor, had stirred mild comment when, shortly after arriving at NATO, he indicated his intention to share a house with his male chauffeur. Nevertheless, the general has stoutly maintained that he is innocent of impropriety. "Never in my life have I had homosexual contacts of any kind." he said. In the wake of last week's charges, suspicion began to arise that the West German defense ministry may indeed have the wrong man. Both a Cologne newspaper and a radio station reported that patrons of two gay bars Kiessling was supposed to have frequented had never seen...
...successful home artist would have to study either in Düsseldorf or, more likely, in Paris. It is true that some very good American art of this period could not plausibly have been done elsewhere; for example, John Haberle's trompe-l'oeil painting A Bachelor's Drawer, 1890-94, with its laconically joky collection of mementos signifying the past lusts and present debts of a minor artist's life. Yet for every apparent isolate like Homer, there were a dozen Americans beavering away in the teaching studios of Paris, especially those run by Jean...