Word: filed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Earlier this week, Trudel was also informed that he can file a grievance with the University concerning his firing. Trudel has said he will file the grievance, but like Harvard, he and his attorneys seem to be placing their ultimate faith in the NLRB investigation...
...wild parties. Its members are dedicated to improving the adverse conditions which prostitutes now endure. Representatives inform hookers of legal rights that are often denied them in police headquarters and courts. They provide bail, emergency housing and child care; help to find jobs for ex-hookers; file suits to protest the treatment of those still in the profession; and bring the pertinent issues to the attention of nationwide audiences and legislators...
...problem with affirmative action, however, seems to be that people expect it will end discrimination. An affirmative action plan is for the most part a data-keeping requirement that can indicate the existence of discrimination. With this kind of ammunition, one law student says, people are encouraged to file employment discrimination cases when they feel they have been treated unfairly. But the backlog of such agencies as the MCAD, with more than 2,000 cases behind and without a dime left to conduct costly public hearings and the EEOC, with a national backlog of 21,000 cases, does not suggest...
...least one Harvard final club has an important file in its club library, faithfully maintained by the club librarian for generations. In the file listed under departments such as "History" and "English," are old term papers for student use. Nearby stacks of Cliffe's and Monarch Notes are stacked up, along with condensed versions of popular plays, etc-the kind with comments in the margins. Unfortunately, says a source within the club, the file has been neglected in the past few years. "Most of the papers are pretty shitty, and most of them are from the 1930's anyway. There...
Wriston termed the Post story "the moral equivalent of publishing raw data from an outdated FBI file." He insisted that Citi bank's condition is "excellent." Rockefeller called the story "a clear case of irresponsible journalism" and asserted that Chase is "sound, vital and profitable." Comptroller of the Currency James E. Smith noted that all the in formation was taken from outdated reports some l l/2 years old. Both banks have had subsequent inspections and, except for the loan losses, they apparently more than satisfied the examiners. The banks, said Smith, "continue to be among the soundest banking institutions...