Word: liasons
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...ACSR on similar committees founded as early as 1971 at several other colleges. Since other institutions found the committees "useful and productive," Harvard created the ACSR to obtain the community's views on shareholder issues, says Stephen B. Farber '63, special assistant to President Bok. Farber is Bok's liason to the ACSR and the Corporation Committee on Shareholder Responsibility...
...policies they feel compelled to follow in the countryside. The government has concentrated small rural villages into larger hamlets, called aldeamentos, and thus made contact and cooperation with independence movements more observable and more easily disrupted. In each aldeamento, the government appoints a regedor, who serves as a liason with the authorities and sets up a hamlet-militia...
Doug: coordinator, the liason between Don and us; self-admitted "low man on the totem pole" at New England Productions. "I try to stay out of the way;" Harvard '72, as are many of the others. (Doug's Eliot House friends are the core of the group. I work for Don because Doug and I have a mutual friend.) He knows all of us, yet he's one of the few people who can talk to Don privately. He handles the smallest problems, of people placement, and logistics. He has a distinguishing pad of yellow legal paper...
...spring, the University started fighting a losing battle when it authorized HSA as the sole organizer of Harvard charter flights. But when Uni-Travel, an outside travel agency, offered a charter flight to Acapulco this spring, the University couldn't find the student who was Uni-Travel's Harvard liason. He would have been subject to University discipline...
...your report on the dismissal of Phillipp Schorsch, the clear implication is that Professor Rosenbloom has excluded him from the Business School Doctoral Program in response to pressure from a father whose daughter had a liason with Phillipp...