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...THREE HARVARD students who are confined to wheelchairs and the roughly 50 other disabled students at the College face a series of academic and social disadvantages. Although the University has made it a $200,000-per-year priority to alleviate many of these disadvantages, there are some simple and relatively inexpensive steps it has not yet taken...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Redirect Effort | 5/14/1986 | See Source »

Melendez added that he hopes a move to Burr Hall would offer the council more space for the same $1900-per-year rent. Currently the council is the only one of about 40 undergraduate organizations with College office space that pays rent to the University...

Author: By Sam Murrell, | Title: Council Will Consider Move To New Office | 3/13/1985 | See Source »

Patricia Roberts, 32, a Federal Reserve Board researcher in Washington, decided that homeownership even before marriage was the best way to beat inflation. As a single person, her $24,000-per-year salary put her in a relatively high tax bracket, and she lacked the tax benefits of owning a house. The trouble was that she could not meet the steep mortgage payments required for homes in the expensive Virginia suburbs. Her friend Suzanne Reed, 30, who works for the House Republican Research Committee, was in a similar bind. "It finally dawned on us," says Roberts, "that we just couldn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Squeeze Play at Home | 11/30/1981 | See Source »

...example, Snyder notes that the only substantial difference between a company's "junior" and "senior" claims adjuster, other than a $6000- to $10,000-per-year salary gap, may be the "coincidence" that all the junior claims adjusters are women...

Author: By Geoffrey T. Gibbs, | Title: Continuing the Good Fight | 10/1/1980 | See Source »

...outspoken, well-tailored $82,500-per-year superintendent of the nation's third largest school system, Chicago's Joseph Harmon was a favorite in the Gold Coast parlors of the city's business elite. In four years on the job his scrappy resistance to busing in the racially divided system, now 80% nonwhite, won him praise from whites-and steady criticism from minorities and the Federal Government. But when Hannon recently telephoned to talk about the schools with his friend Don Reuben, a well-connected local lawyer and adviser to Chicago's Mayor Jane Byrne...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Case of the Missing Millions | 12/17/1979 | See Source »

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