Word: chairmen
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Forseeing that seven distinct task forces studying seven artifically divided areas would inevitably result in some overlap, Rosovsky also created a coordinating committee that he chairs. The panel includes all of the task force chairmen, President Bok and Francis M. Pipkin, associate dean of the Faculty. While the monthly meetings of the panel are now intended to prevent individual task forces from "barking up the wrong tree," according to one administrator, ultimately, the committee will attempt to synthesize the task forces' recommendations. Rosovsky stresses that the committee will work by consensus. "It's not a matter...
Connolly's Barbecue. Ostensibly it will be just another Texas barbecue, but it smells like presidential politicking. The 50 Republican state chairmen have been invited to a working session at a San Antonio hotel on March 12, followed by a meeting next day at the ranch of John Connally-four days after the Florida primary, Texas Republican Chairman Ray Hutchison says he asked Connally to play host and insists that the group is meeting only to discuss the problems Republican candidates for Congress will face. But if Ronald Reagan does well against President Ford in New Hampshire and Florida...
...power to effectively promote equal employment opportunity for women and minorities. According to Leonard, some of the substantial discrepancies between the requirements of Revised Order No. 4 and the submissions of the autonomous schools and departments have been repeatedly drawn to the attention of the deans and department chairmen, yet the deficiences have not been corrected. The problem with affirmative action at Harvard University has very little to do with Leonard. The problem has to do with a generalized resistance to progress for women and minorities here at Harvard at every level...
Another part of our 1976 planning took place in Washington last month, when staffers from New York and correspondents from round the country met for two days to compare notes. The preparations included talking politics with some old pros: Gerald Ford, Nelson Rockefeller, Senator Edward Kennedy and the chairmen of the Republican and Democratic national committees, Howard Callaway and Robert Strauss. Even before then, most of the leading candidates had met with TIME'S editors in New York...
...contributions in their reports to the SEC and the public. Most companies let the matter drop at that point. Some exceptions: Ashland Oil chose to make Chairman Orin Atkins and two other executives pay the company $325,000 from their own pockets, and 3M got several officers, including former Chairmen Bert Cross and Harry Heltzer, to give back $480,000. Thomas V. Jones resigned as chairman of Northrop and is supposed to be replaced as president no later than June 16; after that, he may-or may not-stay on as chief executive. Gulf fired Chairman Bob R. Dorsey, even...