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Edward D. Rowley, assistant director of placement for alumni, said yesterday that his files don't indicate whether a person is "black, white or female," adding that "we treat the women graduates as we treat the men graduates...

Author: By Lisa Brown and Diane Sherlock, S | Title: B-School Issues Placement Guidelines | 5/7/1976 | See Source »

Former Marine Sergeant Leonard Budd, who now works for the department of public health in Rowley, Mass., spent 5½ years in North Vietnamese prisoner-of-war camps after the truck he was driving near the DMZ was ambushed. Budd feels that aid to Viet Nam should be cut off. "We were right to supply them as long as the supply was needed and they had the initiative to follow through and use it wisely," he said. "But the way they have been wasting it, with their morale as low as it is, and deserting at the rate they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: The Reaction of the Veteran | 3/31/1975 | See Source »

Saturday night's game at the Rock Meadow Stables in Rowley gives the Harvard club a 3-1 season record approaching their two most difficult games of the season. This Saturday night the Harvard trio faces a strong Cornell squad in Ithaca. N.Y. and the following Saturday, March 1, they square-off against the defending national champions, the University of Connecticut...

Author: By Barry R. Sloane, | Title: Polo Club Defeats Yale By One Goal In 'Sloppy' Contest | 2/18/1975 | See Source »

...club practices every Monday and Wednesday night and holds its home games on Saturday nights at the Rock Meadow Stables in Rowley, Mass., about a 45 minute drive from Cambridge. They have 12 polo "ponies," an assortment of thoroughbreds, quarter horses, and mixed breed western horses, which have an average age of 14 or 15 years...

Author: By Barry R. Sloane, | Title: Polo Club Hoping for Best Season in a Decade | 1/29/1975 | See Source »

...Columnist Nat Hentoff, William F. Buckley Jr., the elegantly acerbic conservative commentator, suddenly stopped short the colloquy, looked down, and testily muttered, "Shut up." Moments later he paused and clonked something below. Left-wing kibitzers in the studio audience? No, Buckley's target was his King Charles spaniel Rowley, which he had brought to the studio. Showing that he bore no ill will, Rowley then jumped into Buckley's .lap and planted a slurpy kiss on his cheek. All of which left Hentoff with somewhat more of an interview than he had expected. Said the show...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Aug. 26, 1974 | 8/26/1974 | See Source »

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