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Word: recruiting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...increased at this time because of the strains that would be placed on the "quality of education." So, as the number of undergraduate women goes up, the number of men will fall in the College. Unfortunately, it is difficult to believe that many Harvard alums will work hard to recruit women at the same time they are being told that, as the women applicant pool increases, the chances of their sons getting into Harvard will drop...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Equalize Admissions | 3/13/1975 | See Source »

...wants to fight the attitudes at Harvard and Radcliffe that stop students from doing anything that doesn't produce any immediate results. The new president feels that the University's structure fosters that student attitude, but he and his cabinet want to recruit and educate volunteers in the hopes of making some change in a system they have unconsciously helped to perpetuate...

Author: By Hope Scott, | Title: Phillips Brooks House Changes Its Politics | 3/10/1975 | See Source »

...anachronism 20 years ago. Meany's archenemy was Walter Reuther, the fiery and eloquent head of the United Auto Workers, who was the great reforming force in American labor after World War II. Second only to Meany in power, Reuther wanted the AFL-CIO to fight harder to recruit new members and to crusade more. Stubbornly, Meany took a pragmatic, go-slow approach ("ideology is baloney," he says). Bitter with frustration, Reuther pulled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PERSONALITY: Labor's Grand Old Godfather | 3/3/1975 | See Source »

...United Farm Workers and their supporters at Harvard announced last night they plan to confront Ernest Gallo of the Gallo Wine Co. with petitions condemning his company when he comes to the Business School today to recruit executives...

Author: By Christopher B. Daly, | Title: UFW, Supporters Will Protest Gallo's Recruiting at B-School | 3/3/1975 | See Source »

...known that the company produces about one-third of all wine sold in this country. Gallo's pre-tax profits in 1971 reached $35 to $40 million, according to the Nov. 27 1972, issue of Time. Gallo's economic strength makes it possible for the company to recruit and transport strike breakers, to conduct large0scale public relations campaigns, to bear the costs of temporary production disruption due to strikes and to involve itself in drawn-out court cases. These are all expensive operations which companies with less market control and lower profits could not afford...

Author: By Carol Radway and Christopher Tilly, S | Title: Gallo Boycott: | 2/11/1975 | See Source »

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