Word: recruitable
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Jackson asserted he thought Harvard coaches must recruit, too. "In my personal opinion," he observed, "it would be a most amazing situation if this were not done. What else do coaches do in the off-season...
DeLaney Kiphuth, Director of Athletics at Yale, last night described the Eli policy as "basically the same as Harvard's." "A coach should not be interested in calling on a boy at home to recruit him. This is an admissions officer's business," he declared...
...institute will recruit up to 20 women with Ph.D.s and specific projects, call them "Associate Scholars," and pay them $3,000 a year to flex their minds amid Radcliffe's (and Harvard's) libraries and mostly male professors. Another group of "Resident Fellows," e.g., teachers on sabbatical, will get less pay but the same privileges...
...cited Pennsylvania and Yale as the Ivy schools with rules on recruiting by coaches similar to the College's. "At the other end of the spectrum, where coaches have varying degrees of freedom to recruit--within basic Ivy Group and NCAA rules--are Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, and Princeton," he said...
...emerging nations." The conference's chairman, Thomas P. Melandy, was a supporter of vice-President Nixon; he envisioned the "Peace Corps" as a non-governmental agency, a "citizens' committee." Seeking financial support from foundations, corporations and the government, this citizens' committee would compile a roster of overseas positions, recruit young men, run a three-month orientation course, assign participants to positions according to aptitudes, and maintain contact with them. As a "people-to-people" program, this private corps would, Melady argued, have "far more impact than a government operation, which, regardless of its good work, would be labeled...