Word: stade
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...infuriated to read Master von Stade's sexist letter. So he thinks that women don't become "important"! Does he ever consider why? The Harvard personnel office is part of the reason. When an intelligent, well-educated woman with a degree from one of the Seven Sisters interviews for a job at Harvard they ask her about her typing skills and may offer her a job as a secretary...
...Graduate Women's Organization has read the text of Dean F. Skiddy von Stade's letter to former Radcliffe Dean of Admissions David K. Smith. We are dismayed at the views he expressed, but we are not surprised. We have been trying to convince the Harvard community that a significant portion of the Harvard Administration shares Dean von Stade's view of educated women. That is to say, that we are "dull" and incapable of significant contributions to scholarship or to society, and that motherhood and intellectual functioning are mutually exclusive. On the basis of these beliefs the administration seems...
...have maintained (Goodyear, Michelini and Tymo-czko, "What Ever Happened to the Radcliffe Merger," Harvard Bulletin, Oct. 26, 1970) that the public statements of high Harvard administrative officials with regard to the proposed merger of Harvard and Radcliffe reflect unspoken prejudices against women. The striking feature of Dean von Stade's letter is the ugly clarity with which he expresses his contempt for women. Yet the letter is important not as an expression of one man's personal views, but as a uniquely honest exposition of the opinions shared by high officials of the Harvard Administration. It is these...
...organization described von Stade's letter about the education of women at Harvard as "irresponsible and totally lacking in judgment or balance...
...another letter, to appear in Friday's CRIMSON, NOW says that von Stade's opinions are important "not as one man's personal views, but as a uniquely honest exposition of the opinions shared by high officials of the Harvard Administration...