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Bowdoin professor Lawrence S. Hall defended Enteman yesterday, calling the conditions of his resignation "political." Hall said Enteman "tried to withdraw the college's investments in South Africa, delivered a pay raise that the faculty was promised a long time ago, and he insisted that women be allowed to join the fraternities...

Author: By James L. Matory, | Title: Bowdoin President Quits After Battle Against Trustees | 11/13/1980 | See Source »

Alan M. Zukerman '81, a CHUL delegate from Dunster House, said he was "disillusioned by the administration's behavior" in the meeting. "It was childish for Dean Fox to withdraw all the proposals that had just been made simply because a vote didn't go the way he wanted," he added...

Author: By Alan Cooperman, | Title: CHUL Reconsiders Poster Regulations | 11/4/1980 | See Source »

Students found guilty of plagiarism, which Bossert said is a more accurate description of the students' actions than cheating," would "ordinarily be required to withdraw from the college," according to the Handbook for Students.CrimsonElizabeth HarpelProfessor WILLIAM H. BOSSERT...

Author: By David M. Morris, | Title: Professor to Investigate Alleged Copying of Work | 11/4/1980 | See Source »

...Raymond Rogers, 36, a former VISTA worker, the strategy aimed at isolating Stevens from the business community. Rogers scored his first coup in 1978; that was when the Manufacturers Hanover bank dropped two of its directors who were also Stevens directors, following a threat by many unions to withdraw more than $1 billion in pension and other funds they had on deposit at the institution. Six months later the New York Life Insurance Co. decided to remove Stevens Chairman James Finley from its board, after the A.C.T.W.U. threatened to run its own candidates for the board seats held by Finley...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Stevens Accord | 11/3/1980 | See Source »

...EAST. Once Carter abandoned his campaign promise to withdraw troops from South Korea, U.S. military strategists concluded that the balance of power in the region was no longer in jeopardy. Says John Collins, a senior specialist in national defense at the Library of Congress: "All told, a rough state of equilibrium now prevails between U.S. and Soviet forces in the Far East." Brown believes that the balance of power has even tipped toward the U.S. because of a hardening of attitude toward the Soviets by both China and Japan. China now pins down a quarter of the Soviet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: The Great Defense War | 10/27/1980 | See Source »

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