Word: staffers
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...first, after Penn's decisive victory in the Adams Cup last May, was produced in the face of subtle urging from Sports Illustrated staffer Hugh Whall to claim final domination over the Harvard empire. Nash would have none of it, predicted that Harvard could just as easily reverse the result a week later. And when the Crimson fulfilled his suggestion, he pointed out that Parker and Harvard were as powerful and as lordly as ever...
There have been innumerable teach-ins, speeches, and meetings on our campus-none disrupted-opposing America's role in Vietnam. This meeting was to have presented speakers who would offer evidence and opinions supporting that role. Several hundred students turned out to hear them. Guests included an AID staffer with years of experience in Vietnam, a professor who had taught there, and Thai and Vietnamese diplomats...
...thirds majority of the Senate, and there are enough textile-state Senators to make passage difficult unless the Sato government makes a binding bilateral agreement to cut down on textile shipments to the U.S. "We are not trying to sandbag the Japanese with this," a White House staffer insists. Perhaps Nixon is only trying to sandbag Mills, but he may hit Sato as well. That could be dangerous. In the unlikely event that reversion of Okinawa collapses because Nixon has tied it to textiles, Sato could fall as a result. But there is still plenty of room for all sides...
Exchanging one's personal notions for the facts is, of course, the business of journalists-and of polltakers. So is translating facts into understanding. Michael Edison, a Harris staffer who helped devise the poll, says that "the masses of numbers seem dry, but you realize that it's really thousands of people talking, and you try to save the echoes of what they are saying." In this week's cover story, the editors of TIME have attempted to do just that...
...pregnant woman anywhere in the U.S. can call Z.P.G. AID Staffer Kit Riggs gets her name, address and financial status, and can usually give preliminary advice on the phone. Then Mrs. Riggs feeds her caller's data into a shared-time computer. Within five minutes, the computer produces a printout listing the names of the eight or ten doctors and clinics nearest the caller, with their fees and other pertinent facts. Mrs. Riggs mails this printout to the caller. AID makes no charge for its service, but asks women who can afford it to send a $5 donation...