Word: counseled
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Daniel Steiner '54, general counsel to the University, said yesterday that Powers is a "very strong candidate" for the job, based on the quality of his past performance at Harvard...
...National Labor Relations Board in Boston, lawyers representing Harvard and lawyers for a New York-based labor union have met an average of three times a week before an NLRB hearing officer to present opposing positions. Frequently, University administrators such as Daniel Steiner '54, Harvard's general counsel; John B. Butler, director of personnel; and Douglas Knox, the Medical Area personnel head: are in attendance. Butler and Knox have served as witnesses for Harvard. Steiner simply observes. This issue in question is a petition by a group of Harvard employees to hold a union-forming election. The group...
...tickets if I have to hawk my left ear." The refugees probably will be released from the camp this week. In the meantime, Mills and Swissair have kept up their hopes. The airline has supplied food and clothes, and Mills acts as the group's personal legal counsel, moral overseer and English teacher. He has also spent nearly $2,000 for clothing, food and toys. Says Mills, "I've been buying bras, baby clothes, milk and bread -playing mama for them...
Daniel Steiner '54, general counsel to the University, said yesterday that his office will probably transmit to the faculties within a day the names of the students who sat in two weeks ago in Massachusetts Hall to protest the planning of the DuBois Institute. Almost all of the students are in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, so the names will probably go to Dean Rosovsky...
...subsequent events, particularly the American participation in Viet Nam. Ophuls set out to explore the contested-some would say outrageous-theory that Nazi genocide and tragedies like My Lai are somehow comparable, an idea that had wide currency a few years ago. He had been inspired by U.S. Chief Counsel Telford Taylor's book Nuremberg and Vietnam: An American Tragedy, which holds that American officials are accountable in the war but that there is no correlation between systematic obliteration and massacre in the field. Taylor was to play an important part in The Memory of Justice...