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...expect that Congressional passage of the new mandatory retirement laws can be avoided. Such a bill could potentially have its most serious impact on the academic job market and higher education. Thus, Harvard must take a firm stand in favor of proposed amendments to the bill that would exempt tenured college faculty from the 70-year minimum mandatory retirement age. University-level academics are among those jobholders who can be expected to continue to work if the unamended bill is approved. And, as Graduate School Dean Edward L. Keenan '57 says, professors "tend to be obscenely long-lived...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Retirement | 10/19/1977 | See Source »

...Massachusetts Department of Public Health does not want the legislature to exempt hospital research and education programs from the certificate-of-need...

Author: By Sarah C.m.paine, | Title: Hospitals Back Proposed Bill Limiting Controls on Research | 10/18/1977 | See Source »

Douglas Bell, a Cambridge developer, appealed to the City Council yesterday to exempt his townhouse development on Irving St. from zoning regulations concerning parking places...

Author: By Michael Kendall, | Title: Council Debates Parking Spaces | 10/18/1977 | See Source »

...Massachusetts Hospital Association (MHA), which includes Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital, wants the state legislature to exempt hospitals from requirements to file certificate-of-need statements justifying the costs of research and education projects...

Author: By Sarah C.m.paine, | Title: Hospitals Back Proposed Bill Limiting Controls on Research | 10/18/1977 | See Source »

...those farms belongs to Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Robert Meyer, whose family owns or leases 2,100 Imperial Valley acres. Like his neighbors, Meyer believed the valley was exempt from the 1902 law because local farmers had built their own 50-mile Alamo Canal to irrigate their fields in 1901, a year before the Government offered to help out. When a federal court disagreed last August-after an eleven-year legal battle -Meyer launched a personal lobbying campaign. Contending that he was acting as a private citizen, he urged members of Congress and White House aides to exempt the Imperial...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: The Homestead Act Hits Home | 10/17/1977 | See Source »

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