Word: staffers
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Using a similar format, Xerox's course in "problem-solving discussion skills" does for bosses what the selling course does for salesmen. "Most managers," says a Xerox staffer, "are not able to face a subordinate, analyze a problem and reach a solution." To the problem-solving course have come 2,000 employees from Ford, 600 from Westinghouse and 300 from Procter & Gamble. Now offering its lessons mainly to production and manufacturing managers, Xerox is working on a variation for marketing types, will introduce something for general corporate executives late this year...
...difficult story," complains one TV correspondent, "then lose out on play to a bloody action story with no meaning or message." The result-war brought into U.S. living rooms every night-helps explain why it is that so many Americans are so frustrated over Viet Nam. One network staffer there says: "Why should I miss the big shows by explaining too much? We hit hard with the visuals and leave the broader explanations to the press...
...company did manage to turn out major executive changes last week, however. Shuffling the team near the top, Ford named as executive vice president (for finance) a longtime staffer who was one of the original postwar whiz kids: J. Edward Lundy, 52. To replace Charles H. Patterson, who retires next month at 65, Ford chose Mustang Man Lee lacocca (TIME cover, April 17, 1964), now head of Ford's car and truck group. As executive vice president, lacocca, who turns 43 this week, will run all Ford auto operations in North America...
Administration Democrats dismissed the proliferating anti-Johnson groups with bored shrugs. A White House staffer scoffed: "All it takes is two people with a mimeograph machine and the cooperation of the New York Times. It looks like a movement, but the moment you touch it, it dissolves into mist." Wyoming's Democratic Senator Gale McGee urged Johnson to put purely political considerations behind him and concentrate on winning the war. "The issue is so critical that if I were in a position to talk to the President," said McGee, "it would be with the suggestion that he be prepared...
...Esalen in which they played "blindman's buff," one man with eyes open leading another who shut his eyes and contacted his surroundings through touch and smell. At one session, an apparel manufacturer hinted that he really resented his business, wanted to leave it. An Esalen girl staffer then sat opposite him, coaxed him into pretending that she was his business, finally got him to tell her "Go to hell!" He smiled broadly, conceded that he was "proud I could say it." "I am proud of you too," said the girl, who gave him an affectionate hug. Although...