Word: clarks
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Dates: during 1970-1970
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...cost of day care was of central concern at the hearing and Kim Clark, a student in the GSAS, and representative of the Ad Hoe Committee for Day Care at Harvard, maintained that free day care is the right of every student and employee. However, she said, untilthere were enough facilities for everyone, priority should be given to low income parents. "Graduate students are notoriously low-income," she said...
...Clark also said that the University had rejected a petition signed by 1000 people calling for free day care on the grounds that it was "enclavist," or exclusive of the Cambridge community. "But," Clark added, "I have yet to see the University begin work on 'non-enclavist' day care, which would benefit the community...
...discussion of Clark's proposals confusion was apparent on several points, such as the number of eligible children in the Harvard community, the actual cost of day care, how much Harvard could afford to subsidize it, how much parents should be expected to pay, who should have first priority on limited space, and whether day care was an appropriate area for the University to enter...
According to retired Supreme Court Justice Tom Clark, who has concentrated on court congestion in recent years, a key roadblock is the over-compartmentalizing of judges. Most cities assign one judge to handle all arraignments, another for all motions, and so on. Prosecutors and even public defenders are often assigned the same way. Thus all have to start from scratch at each level. Justice Clark and other experts urge that a single judge should handle each case from start to finish. The experimental reform has already speeded up court work in San Francisco, Cleveland and Pittsburgh...
Blue collar workers are more militant today largely because their aspirations have been raised while their real income remains static. "In a sense, businessmen bring labor militance on themselves by advertising and raising prices," says Clark Kerr, former chancellor of the University of California and a top labor expert. "They constantly raise the level of expectations of their own workers." Blue collar workers are also profoundly influenced by what Leonard Woodcock, president of the United Auto Workers, calls "the second life that everyone leads through TV." The worker and his wife constantly see advertised on television the products that...