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...added, "I'm looking for another job because the [racial] situation here is intolerable." The source, who was the first to inform. The Crimson of Croxton's complaint, did not cite specific examples of discrimination other than Croxton's failure to receive promotions above the lowest staff level and her June firing...
...course to Spanish that endures beyond a first generation to a second and third. For an individual, mastery of many languages is one of the sweetest rewards of scholarship. But for a society, separate linguistics seem almost always to drive a wedge between groups of people. We can cite Switzerland, perhaps, as a nation that has managed to contain these linguistic tensions. But almost every other example, from Quebec to the Basque country, from India to the land of Flemings and Walloons, points the other way. It would be a tragedy to add our nation to that list...
Gerrity and other administrators demur when asked to cite specific recruiting efforts that have broken down over the issues of salary. "There are all kinds of reasons people withdraw from being considered for tenured openings," says Robert Kaufman. Gerrity's predecessor as associate dean for financial affairs. And officials flatly deny that any professor has ever left Harvard out of dissatisfaction with his salary. "I've been dean for nine years," says Rosovsky, "and I can't think of a single individual who left here on a salary issue...
Rosovsky and O'Brien both cite faculty salaries as the only priority that could ever challenge financial aid in an ultimate economy squeeze. Given a choice between compromising the quality of faculty or of students. O'Brien says. "Both would probably give a little bit"; he does, however, cite the "special appeal" undergraduate financial aid has for alumni donors as a reason for some optimism...
...loan program nor the Pell Grants--direct grants for needy students, targeted by Reagan for nearly $1 billion of cuts--will have suffered substantially by the time next year's aid applications go through. But the College has already seen some disturbing signs of the deeper problems that officials cite...