Word: reporter
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...seems likely, the full House accepts the committee's report this week, Powell will be allowed to take his seat in the 90th Congress. After taking his oath, the committee said, he should be "brought to the bar of the House in the custody of the sergeant-at-arms and be there publicly censured by the Speaker in the name of the House."* In addition, Powell would lose his 22 years of seniority, dropping from 31st in standing to 434th among 435 members (one other seat is presently vacant). He would thus have to exchange his large, plush office...
Alumni magazines are thought of as a dreary and predictable breed of journals. Turn to page three and you'll find the news of the college, carefully edited to show the institution advancing on an even keel to educational greatness. Near the middle' will be an exhaustive report on the college's latest fund-raising campaign and then come page after page of class notes detailing the life records of hundreds of people you never knew...
...committee has sent copies of the report to the faculty and the extracurricular organizations for their suggestions. It will now evaluate the recommendations and submit a final report to Erwin N, Griswold, Dean of the Law School...
...meeting, Parks, who was also a member of the education committee of the NAACP, read a report based on Boston School Department records which showed that Negro schools were overcrowded, that cost per pupil in Negro schools was below the citywide average, and that reading test scores of Negro pupils were below the already low Boston median. The NAACP also requested a hearing with the School Committee which was granted and held on June 11, 1963. The meeting consisted of talks about the inadequacy of facilities for Negro children and ended with the promise of another meeting...
...sometimes interfere; in 1965 the Center contracted with the Metropolitan Area Planning Council, a state agency to prepare a comprehensive "plan for planning" that would outline the issues facing the Boston area and suggest strategies for dealing with them. When the Joint Center's research team offered a report on public finance to the Council's Economic Development Advisory Committee, they were firmly instructed to "stay away" from the issue. The chairman of the committee turned out to be a leading Republican legislator at that time involved in the battle over the state sales...