Word: dunlop
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...John T. Dunlop, Lamont University Professor, who organized the 20-year effort to raise the $1 million necessary for the chair, yesterday said Kestnbaum was active in many areas of business and politics. He added that the holder of the position could teach at the Business School, the Kennedy School or the College...
...more chapter in the continuing saga of former Harvard racquetman MIKE DESAULNIERS. Desaulniers last weekend captured the $15,000 Dunlop U.S. Pro Squash Championships in Detroit. The tournament marks the third straight time in as many weeks that Desaulniers has beaten Sharif Khan, the current number one world ranking professional. Desaulniers is the first man to ever beat Khan in three consecutive weeks...
...phrase like "deal with," Richardson comes close to persuading us of the possibility. William Ritman's scenery--a set of four double flats turning on hinges--subliminally recalls the flipping of a book's pages as it creates a remarkable variety of oddly-shaped stage spaces. And Frank Dunlop's direction, snappy and alert, largely neutralizes the talkiness of Albee's script, keeping attention fixed on the stage action even as it enters maddening longueurs...
Upon returning to Harvard in 1976 after serving as Secretary of Labor in the Ford Administration, Dunlop found an equally concerned colleague at Harvard, President Derek C. Bok. With Bok's backing, Dunlop began to explore ways to alleviate the tensions that divide makers of public policy and leaders of private enterprise. His vehicle: joint efforts by Harvard's venerable Business School and its younger neighbor on the opposite bank of the Charles River in Cambridge, Mass., the John F. Kennedy School of Government. With the aid of fellow professors, businessmen and another former Cabinet member, Dunlop...
...that 40% of all decisions involving corporate capital investment now are determined by considerations other than profits or the best interests of shareholders and employees. Instead, the determining factor is Government policy; and it, of course, is seldom based on a comprehensive grasp of relevant economic facts. Sums up Dunlop in a masterly understatement: "We need to find better ways to work on the problem...