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John Carlos Correa, MIT Class of '81, said that the alumni decided to start the Endowment because MIT President Paul Gray recently made a "definitive and final statement" against divestment despite earlier promises to include all members of the community in the decision-making process...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Model Helps MIT Alumni Establish Endowment for Divestiture | 10/16/1986 | See Source »

...Board of Trustees for the Endowment includes Katz, Correa, Congressman Bruce Morrison (D-Conn.), MIT '65, Congressman Howard Wolpe (D-Mich.), Urban Studies and Planning Professor Mel King, Political Science Professor Willard Johnson, Electrical Engineering Professor John Weizenbaum, Professor in the Sloan School of Management John Parsons, Gretchen Kalonji, MIT '80, and Dr. Marc Miller...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Model Helps MIT Alumni Establish Endowment for Divestiture | 10/16/1986 | See Source »

...crackdown were soon evident. The feared units of army men, their faces daubed with black greasepaint, fanned out through Santiago's vast slums searching for Pinochet opponents. By week's end more than 40 people had been arrested. Among them: Ricardo Lagos, a moderate Socialist Party leader; German Correa, secretary-general of the Popular Democratic Front, an outlawed Marxist coalition; and Rafael Marroto, a spokesman for the Movement of the Revolutionary Left. Five Catholic priests, two Americans and three French, who worked with the poor were also detained. A few days later, the French clerics were put on a plane...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Chile Pinochet's New State of Siege | 9/22/1986 | See Source »

...phonetic, is easier to learn first. Kindergartners start by handling Montessori method alphabet cards with "tactile" sandpaper letters, soon form words and start reading and writing in French. Apparently they have no trouble switching to English in first grade: "We just add the sounds," says the headmistress, Mrs. Eric Correa. Now the kids are doing arithmetic in French as well as English...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Pioneers | 8/31/1962 | See Source »

against Castro, but Khrushchev's intrusion upset them all. Ecuador's Ambassador to the U.N., Jose A. Correa, who by rotation is president this month of the Security Council, spoke up: "The Latin American countries will struggle for nonintervention against any attempt to violate it. If any power, whether near or far-especially if it is a far-distant power -should attempt to tell us what we are to do, the only thing that will be accomplished will be the achievement of animosity and profound dislike on the part of our people. We do not believe in having...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CUBA: Tighter Red Knots | 8/1/1960 | See Source »

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