Word: seligmans
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Nicole Seligman's piece, "Bok Trip Yields $1.2 Million for East Asian Studies Here," (Crimson, February 2, 1977), you ran good coverage of Harvard's most recent Asian venture. However, at least two further thoughts come to mind...
There are probably few more meaningless preoccupations around Harvard than correcting errors of fact or interpretation in The Crimson, but here goes. An Update article in your November 17 issue, Nicole Seligman's "The Union That Never Made It," contains several references to the Adams History Club. The problem lies with your reporter's statement that we were "successful last year in fighting the History Department on the number of teaching fellow openings." It just didn't happen. What transpired, more or less, was this. The History Department requested a certain number of teaching fellow fifths from the Dean...
...older people who call give me hell when I tell them they can't go." Volunteers are carefully screened by psychologists and social workers to weed out drug users and cranks. "We want to make sure they are committed to the Jewish situation and social justice," says Naomi Seligman, a psychiatric social worker at Brooklyn Community Counseling Service. "We don't want them because they are adventurers, although that may be a factor in the motivation of many acceptable candidates. I'm very impressed with these kids. It's good to see that there is still...
...Winslow the line climbs again to its highest point at Riordan, the 7,313-ft. Arizona Divide. On a fast train like the Super C the crews get a full day's pay for as little as 2½ hours on the railroad. The men lay over in Seligman; if they are not assigned a return run within 16 hours their pay starts again The pay is good: the average on the Albuquerque division is more than $12,000 a year, with senior engineers making $18,000 easily. Trainmaster E.L. Kidd notes that practically...
...published in 1958; it has since sold 50,000 copies. To further his reform cause, Kelso later started in Washington the Institute for the Study of Economic Systems. Last year he gave the institute $52.000 from the six-figure income that he draws as senior partner in Kelso, Cotton, Seligman & Ray, one of San Francisco's ten largest law firms...