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...countries of our continent. Those young old people believe that the university has been created to train technicians and they think that they should be satisfied with merely acquiring a professional title. The degree gives them social status and boosts them on their way up the social ladder. Caramba, how terribly dangerous, the degree is, an instrument that gives them more income and better living conditions than the majority of the rest of our fellow citizens...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Salvador Allende Talks About Latin America | 10/3/1973 | See Source »

...page report has "more basic information and better statistics" than any of the commission's 19 previous studies, says Kerr, former president of the University of California. Women continue to constitute "the largest unused supply of superior intelligence in the United States." With each step up the academic ladder, their participation decreases. Women are 50.4% of high school graduates, 43% of college graduates, but only 13% of those receiving doctorates. Less than one-fourth of all college-level faculty members are women, only 8.6% full professors. The gap between the sexes in faculty salaries for comparable positions averages...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Women: Still Unequal | 10/1/1973 | See Source »

...graduates, glamour fields include management consulting, land development, banking and finance. In those fields, M.B.A.s tend to start fairly high on the ladder, gain responsibility quickly and move ahead fast. But there is a decline of interest in that old M.B.A. watering hole, Wall Street, where hours are long and profits shortening. In fact, says Robert Flanagan, chief recruiter for Booz, Allen & Hamilton Inc. management consultants: "It's very tough to get people to consider coming to New York City for anything...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Bull Market for M.B.A.s | 8/6/1973 | See Source »

Down the Administrative ladder lies the event which has taken most of the blame for the mess, although it is probably one of the less significant instigators of the housing mess: the CHUL housing shake-up in March. At that time, Radcliffe CHUL members agreed to drop their strict insistence on maintaining a 1 to 1 sex ratio at Radcliffe and to allow a decrease--1.18 to 1-- in the number of women at the 'Cliffe. In return for that concession, the Harvard CHUL members agreed to absorb 82 spaces from Radcliffe and also to convert 100 places at Radcliffe...

Author: By Charles E. Shepard, | Title: The Housing Crisis: Chickens Are Roosting | 6/14/1973 | See Source »

Rather, it is the latest in a series of efforts to insure--to the government's satisfaction--the equal employment of women and minority group members on all the rungs of the ladder, in all the faculties and departments of the University...

Author: By Robin Freedberg, | Title: Women Form Employee Group In Atmosphere of Tense Distrust | 6/14/1973 | See Source »

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