Word: joints
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Charles J. Christenson, Straus Professor of Business Administration with a joint appointment at the Kennedy School, differentiates between functional management--running an organization--and general management, which involves integrating objectives into broader policies. The latter method appears to be the Kennedy School's objective, training generalists, who, like the omnicompetent Confucian scholars who ran ancient China, are capable of flexible decision-making as well as bureaucratic gamesmanship...
...Ph.D. should not be a limiting degree. It should not just be used to make professors," says Keenan. The dean says he would like to see more joint programs combining preparation for the Ph.D. with others types of training, combinations like History and Law or English and Journalism. He says he expects that Harvard will participate in a new federally-funded program designed to help humanities Ph.D.'s find jobs outside the academic world...
...President George Meany was persuaded to support the treaty after Carter guaranteed job rights for Canal Zone workers. Former Secretary of State Dean Rusk warned that rejection of the agreement could lead to bloodshed and the commitment of U.S. troops. General George S. Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, summoned 75 retired generals and admirals to a meeting to drum up support for the treaty. Former Democratic National Committee Chairman Robert Strauss, about to depart for trade talks in Tokyo, was rerouted to Capitol Hill, where his yarn-spinning charm was put to work on wavering Congressmen...
...real world between 1970 and 1976, the median income of American families and consumer prices generally both rose about 47%. But, reports the M.I.T.-Harvard Joint Center for Urban Studies, the median price of existing houses jumped 65%, from $23,030 to $38,100. Worse, newhouse prices shot up 89%, to $44,200. The growth in size and quality of the houses brought part of this great increase, but most of it was produced by housing inflation...
...next afternoon Ford called Carter at Camp David; the President thanked him "for this example of bipartisan support." In between conversations, Ford had been briefed for 90 minutes by Sol Linowitz (who had negotiated the terms, along with Ellsworth Bunker), and by Gen. George S. Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. At the White House, Carter had former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger over for lunch and stressed that the agreement was part of "an absolute continuum of what you and [former President Ford] started." Kissinger, whose foreign policy was a major target during last year...