Word: strauch
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Radcliffe will probably retain control over its property and endowment, so the kind of change the Joint Policy Committee could make would be new Harvard jobs for Radcliffe administrators or places on Harvard governing boards for Radcliffe alumni. But whatever the Strauch Committee does will have a major effect on the corporate structure of Harvard and Radcliffe. Equal-access admissions will probably mean a single admissions office, which would make the pressure for full corporate merger even greater...
Since the Strauch Committee was formed last January. Harvard and Radcliffe administrators have gracefully declined to speculate about the future of undergraduate admissions policies. The standard line has been that it would not be prudent or proper to make any comments before Karl Strauch, professor of Physics, conveys his Committee's report to Presidents Bok and Horner...
Although administrators have declined comment and Strauch has conducted his committee's meetings in a veil of secrecy, it now appears inevitable that Harvard and Radcliffe will move to some form of equal access admissions. This will probably mean a consolidation of the Harvard and Radcliffe admissions staffs, regardless of the outcome of the current round of merger talkes...
Last month, L. Fred Jewett '57, director of Harvard Admissions and a member of the Strauch Committee, wrote a compromise report on the expansion question. The report has not been released (it will be part of the Committee's final report), but Jewett apparently succeeded in working out recommendations satisfactory both to opponents and to supporters of expansion...
...also said she hopes that whatever decision the Strauch Committee comes to regarding equal access admissions will aid and encourage women...