Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...report on the company's sales to the South African government and its public corporations, including both sales volume and a description of products provided or services rendered...
...Disclosure of Activities in South Africa. Mr. Calkins' letter also asked that companies provide a continuing report to permit interested shareholders to assess for themselves the progress being made by a company with respect to its employment policies and practices. Amplifying that suggestion, the ACSR believes that a company continuing to operate in South Africa should provide...
...strange parallel to the 1972 events, this year's demonstrations and interest in South Africa prompted Bok to send one of his current assistants to investigate South Africa firsthand. Lawrence F. Stevens '65, secretary of the ACSR, traveled for three weeks n South Africa and will report his findings to the Corporation's investment subcommittee, which was set up simultaneously with the ACSR and which makes final investment decisions with the advice of the ACSR. In 1972 students were calling for divestiture of stock in Gulf because it and other U.S. corporations were helping the white minority regime in Angola...
...much more than the shareholder resolutions, the ACSR report on South African investments has drawn the attention of the University community. In its report presented to the Corporation on March 20, the recommended a policy of non-investment in banks ending money to the South African government or its public corporations, the sale of the bonds Harvard now holds in those banks, and the establishment of a detailed procedure for monitoring U.S. firms' compliance with apartheid. After studying the firms the ACSR will reevaluate the entire situation next fall and will propose shareholder resolutions in those Companies that it believes...
While most Corporation members decline to speculate on what position the Corporation will take on the issue, Putnam says he believes the Corporation will agree with the vast majority of the ACSR report and will "go farther on the banks." Although he is not a member of the four-man investment subcommittee, Bok has involved himself on the issue because the full Corporation makes all major policy decisions for the University. Bok, as president, is the most influential Corporation member, and because he has over the years acquired a reputation for being one of the more liberal members...