Word: orderings
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...summer, spending 60 per cent of the money on students with summer jobs, and therefore had only enough left over to provide 80 women with term-time work-study jobs. Harvard, in the meantime, received a large increase in its original work-study grant from the government in order to fund sizeable graduate school work-study programs, but the graduate schools did not claim as much money as Harvard had expected. Harvard reallocated the unused funds in February to undergraduate men, but women, as Radcliffe students, could not share the windfall...
...been denied the right to a union by a company that cares more about money than about the quality of human life. Stevens has violated the NLRA over 100 times. In Statesboro, Ga., the National Labor Relations Board judged that free union elections were impossible and issued a bargaining order mandating that Stevens negotiate with the union. Rather than negotiate, the company closed the entire plant, and transferred all its machinery and personnel to other factories, as a graphic warning to workers with ideas about organizing a union...
...order for a student to concentrate outside of the 38 regular fields, the student must submit an application stating his or her reasons for wanting to concentrate in the field and several letters of recommendation. The request must be approved by the 13-member Standing Committee on Special Concentrations. Students may apply for a special concentration at three times during the year. Carol S. Thorne, secretary of the Committee on Special Concentrations, estimated that about eight to ten students apply for a special concentration at each of the three opportunities. Thorne said students applying for a special concentration generally have...
...long as there remains such strong resistance to the unions, and while companies such as J.P. Stevens still retain their hold on southern workers, the UFW's organizing work in the southern fields will have to wait. Instead, the farmworkers will support the struggles of the textile workers, in order that the workers of the South, both in the fields and in the mills, will realize that the fight for unionization must be waged together...
...group of armchair quarterbacks to sit back and call for what can only be seen as a romanticized vision of a '60s radical government, after the convention has labored for six months to incorporate student views in order to produce a viable proposal for effective student government, is as counterproductive as it is sorely misguided. An activist, grass-roots coalition of students that would stridently demand University cooperation with their wishes may be a lofty ideal, but it can hardly be taken seriously as an alternative to the well-thought-out proposed Assembly. Such a coalition would be too decentralized...