Word: willard
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Local Demands. As the United Auto Workers' strike against General Motors entered its second week, U.S. auto production was down 41%, G.M. laid off 20,000 men in divisions that had not been struck, and Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz anxiously got on the phone to both sides. But 16,000 local work issues stood in the way of any settlement. The union's 130 G.M. locals took the opportunity to toss in every complaint about work procedures, every demand for extra comforts. Some, such as demands for heated washrooms in the winter and free safety glasses on production...
...Russell Sage (wife of a millionaire investor), a library with 19,000 volumes, hockey fields, riding stables, a gymnasium with swimming pool and bowling alleys. Tuition and board costs $3,000, and optional charges (piano lessons, for example) can raise the bill by another $ 1,000. Yet Emma Willard is not a rich school; the endowment per pupil is $2,500, compared to $11,400 for Miss Porter's in Connecticut. Emma Willard took in only $80,000 in gifts last year, all of which went to scholarships and loans to 62 of its 340 students...
Learning by Era. Modernizing a plan of study introduced by Emma Willard in the 19th century, the curriculum integrates its studies of art, religion, music and literature into single historical eras. A freshman studies ancient history. A sophomore learning about the Renaissance studies the medieval church, listens to Gregorian chants, designs an illuminated manuscript in her art class. The junior year concentrates on the industrial revolution, and the senior year on modern times...
About half of the girls go on to some 40 women's colleges in the East, including all the "Seven Sisters," but no particular sister more than the others: the other half-for all Emma Willard girls go to college-choose coed colleges all over the U.S. Girls from Emma Willard usually do exceptionally well, and many become lawyers, doctors and teachers...
Principal Dietel, a graduate of Exeter, Princeton and Yale, came to Emma Willard in 1961 from Amherst, where he was assistant professor of humanities. "I knew nothing about teen-age girls," he said, but his ignorance has been a blessing. While keeping academic standards as tough as ever, he has softened some of the starchiness. Young ladies may now wear pink nail polish...