Word: hauk
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...against St. John’s Milo Hauk, Omodele-Lucien lived up to his words. After dropping the first point, he countered with two solid serves to capture the upper hand at 30-15. An unforced error gave him a bigger lead...
...Wallensteen and Stefan Nikolic, 8-3, while Hayes and Felton won, 8-6, against Pavel Cerny and Gustavo Loza to clinch the first point for Harvard. The Crimson proceeded to win its first three singles matches to clinch the 4-0 victory. No. 2 Ermakov won comfortably against Milo Hauk (6-2, 6-2) and No. 3 Hayes beat Cerny, 6-3, 6-4. Felton wrapped up the winners by defeating Loza 6-4, 6-0 at No. 4. While Fish was pleased with Harvard’s tournament performance, he stressed there was still plenty of room for improvement...
...rolls. One feels compelled to credit much of this material to Williams instead of Screenwriter Mitch Markowitz. But he has created a smart and intricate context for the star. The station's staff constitutes a sort of awkward squad of the airwaves, commanded by Lieut. Hauk (Bruno Kirby, who lifts nerdiness to a new comic plain), but anchored in patient decency by Private First Class Garlick (Forest Whitaker, who lovably redefines the straight man's role...
...last week, when it dealt with a suit brought by California contractors seeking to overturn a requirement of the federal Public Works Employment Act of 1977 that 10% of federal public works grants go to minority contractors. The court returned the case to Los Angeles District Judge A. Andrew Hauk -who had declared the minority contractor set-aside unconstitutional-but it made no ruling on the merits of the case. It suggested only that the California suit may be moot; since all federal contracts for the 65 Los Angeles-area public works projects have already been awarded, there...
...building contractors have sued to overturn a requirement of the Public Works Employment Act of 1977 that 10% of the federal grants go to minority businesses. A U.S. district court ruled that the provision was a violation of both the 14th Amendment and Title VI. Wrote Judge A. Andrew Hauk: "Affirmative action and goals are permissible; race quotas are not. It is as simple as that." Suits have also been brought challenging the federal program that establishes goals for employment of minorities by federal contractors. In the case of Weber vs. Kaiser Aluminum, an applicant sued Kaiser and his union...