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...current undergraduates, the job hunt after college will only get harder. Richard Freeman, an associate professor of economics at Harvard, believes that seniors will face a long delay before they find the jobs they want. Says he: "An awful lot of people are going to end up in nonmanagerial, nonprofessional jobs, and the situation is not going to get any better until the 1980s." College enrollments, already dropping as a result of the end of the baby boom, may well begin to fall even faster as students become aware that a college degree is no longer an automatic passport...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Job Outlook: Awful | 6/9/1975 | See Source »

...Real Paper's photo editor. "You can't figure out where things started falling apart." But he has his theories, like most staff members--and the theories are worth examining for what they migh, reveal about Boston journalism, collective ownership of newspapers, and, as supplements editor Jan Freeman puts it, "the real important part of the experiment: what happened to us a group...

Author: By Scott A. Kaufer, | Title: Crawling Out of the Snakepit at the Real Paper | 5/7/1975 | See Source »

...beginning," Freeman says, "I think it was terrific, because everyone was united against a common enemy--poverty...it was euphoric...

Author: By Scott A. Kaufer, | Title: Crawling Out of the Snakepit at the Real Paper | 5/7/1975 | See Source »

...transit systems. In processing applications for bond guarantees or for federal subsidies for low-income housing, HUD also ensnarled the applicants in reams of unnecessary red tape. "Decisions are made, unmade and obfuscated to a degree that makes the imperial Chinese bureaucracy appear decisive and swift-moving," says Mark Freeman, executive director of the League of New-Community Developers. The effect has been to stifle the very experimentation that Congress had called...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: New Towns in Trouble | 3/24/1975 | See Source »

...York City. In 1953, as psychiatrist at Youth House, he diagnosed a disturbed 13-year-old as "potentially dangerous." The boy was Lee Harvey Oswald, and Hartogs later parlayed the brief experience into a quick book on Oswald and Jack Ruby (The Two Assassins, written with Freelancer Lucy Freeman). A patient later got him the job as a Cosmopolitan columnist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Sexes: Love Thy Analyst | 3/24/1975 | See Source »

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