T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
606.1 | I'd rather be skiing... | PENUTS::SEMYONOV | | Thu Jan 03 1991 13:29 | 5 |
| I do not know what is required of the person to become an upper-level
manager, but from my experience on average men are brighter than women.
Still it probably is not one of the criterias.
Liza
|
606.2 | (-: (-: INCOMING!!!! :-] | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | Nutcracker Protocol Honeymoon Suite | Thu Jan 03 1991 13:39 | 1 |
|
|
606.3 | | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | and I yours! | Thu Jan 03 1991 14:05 | 3 |
| Gee, Dan. You're just having a *grand* time lately, aren't you!
(*8
|
606.4 | | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Thu Jan 03 1991 16:44 | 6 |
| Re: .1
I think I can agree that brightness is probably not one of the
criteria for succeeding in management :-)
Mary
|
606.5 | I'll go first... | BABEL::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Thu Jan 03 1991 17:29 | 6 |
| >on average men are brighter than women
??????????????????????????????????????
Stunned,
D!
|
606.7 | is there a dog? | DECWET::JWHITE | bless us every one | Thu Jan 03 1991 17:39 | 4 |
|
gosh, i must be getting dyslexic. i read it as 'women brighter
than men' (which is, of course, true :^). oops.
|
606.8 | Geez. | COLBIN::EVANS | One-wheel drivin' | Thu Jan 03 1991 19:08 | 17 |
| RE: "Men are brighter than women."
[Doesn't deserve a response.]
|
606.11 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Jan 04 1991 05:20 | 28 |
|
> > I do not know what is required of the person to become an upper-level
> > manager, but from my experience on average men are brighter than women.
> > Still it probably is not one of the criterias.
>
....................
> The second clause of that same sentence says clearly and only that it
> is the writer's personal experience that men are brigher than women if
> the "average" is considered meaningful. There is nothing here, either,
> that indicates any possible difference in the criteria for promotion to
> VP level.
Actually, if you read the second clause, it says that Liza has
experience on average men.
> In short, there is not the slightest possibility of a valid English
> interpretation of .1 such that a difference in severity of the criteria
> for men and women is even mentioned - unless by stretching the point,
> one might assume that the whole reply taken together implies that a
> woman can be promoted by, perhaps, displaying talents other than
> intelligence. I really prefer not to consider that .1 means this.
A sentence with 59 words is obviously been written to obfuscate.
Dumbfounded of Reading.
|
606.13 | simper...simper | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri Jan 04 1991 09:01 | 4 |
| re .1, yes, and men are so big & strong, too....
Lorna
|
606.14 | it's not like she doesn't work at DEC... | BABEL::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Fri Jan 04 1991 09:56 | 8 |
| Why bother discussing in great detail the possible semantic
interpreations of a sentance written in .1, when you could simply...ask
the author!!!
(I thought the sentence was pretty clear...but you guys seems to feel
there is some ambiguity, and it seems better to ask than to guess.)
D!
|
606.15 | Continuing Lorna's .13 | MRKTNG::GODIN | Whisper words of wisdom--let it be | Fri Jan 04 1991 09:57 | 4 |
| Not to mention, they'll take care of us poor, defenseless women, won't
they?
Karen
|
606.16 | ho-humm | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Fri Jan 04 1991 10:25 | 1 |
| 'nother side-tracked discussion ...
|
606.17 | Get back on line - please | YUPPY::DAVIESA | She is the Alpha... | Fri Jan 04 1991 11:32 | 6 |
|
Re -1
What he said.
'gail
|
606.18 | | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Fri Jan 04 1991 14:16 | 22 |
| re: .1
> from my experience on average men are brighter than women
I'm not gonna flame because that's Liza's experience and she stated
it as such.
But here's what I've heard on the subject, (can't remember any sources
though).
Research on intelligence has shown that there is no significant
difference in the mean intelligence of men vs. women, but there
is a significant difference in the standard deviation. The s.d.
for men is higher than for women.
This means that on average men are not brighter than women, but
they are more deviant. :-)
Mary
|
606.19 | | HOO78C::VISSERS | Dutch Comfort | Fri Jan 04 1991 14:49 | 23 |
| Another remark I heard made on TV some time ago (yes, well I usually
write basenotes in EF91 after watching TV but this one seemed
interesting here :-)):
Prof. Galjaard (don't ask me what he does these days) said there was a
correlation between functioning of male and female managers in
different organisations. On the whole it seemed that men were "better"
in hierarchical organisations, whereas women were "better" in flat
organisations. He pleaded to look at these sort of correlations and
appreciate that there were differences in men and women that might
better not be stamped out but rather taken advantage of.
Musing on this (I don't know whether he's right) I figure a flat
organisation works just as good as a hierarchical but if you have a
majority of managers of either sex the organisation would adapt to
that. For as far as I know, most organisations nowadays are still
hierarchical and that would be, according to Galjaard's theory, a
disadvantage to women. If he's right it would explain quite a lot,
showing the vicious circle.
Comments?
Ad
|
606.20 | | CENTRY::mackin | Our data has arrived! | Fri Jan 04 1991 15:39 | 9 |
| I could guess that one reason women might not, as a general case, function
as well in a hierarchal organization is that they tend to be more consensus
building and in hierarchal organizations you sometimes just have to "sh*t
or get off the pot." Mind you, I don't know if there really is a statistical
blip that does indicate women are better at consensus building than men. It
hasn't been my experience that any particular gender is better at it than
the other.
Jim
|
606.21 | Interesting sidelights | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Jan 04 1991 16:16 | 9 |
| Well, I just got another copy of the Who's Who in Digital list
(as of December 21, 1990).
It was interesting to notice (from the basenote) that Charlotte
Frederick reports to *two* people. Further, she is now the only
Vice President who reports to a manager (Charlie Christ) rather
than solely to another Vice President (or to K.O. himself).
Ann B.
|
606.22 | More gasoline into the fire ... | PENUTS::SEMYONOV | | Mon Jan 07 1991 10:08 | 28 |
|
I have not realised my very short note would cause such a heated
discussion.
1. My English is not perfect as you have undoubtedly noticed
/my native language is Rissian/.
2. Men are brighter than women academically - that's what I meant.
3. From my experiance - being a pure math major and having been educated
in the Soviet Union's one of the best math academic colleges,
I had plenty of time and opportunity to watch the phenomenon.
4. In the Soviet Union the State made a point 70 years ago to treat
women the same way as men (I would gladly use very strong words on
this occasion, if nad any. As I said English is not my native language)
so there could be no question about unequal treatment of men and
women from birth to death. At least I have seen none.
5. Do not think men are smarter or better than women. Hope I used
my adjectives explicitly.
6. I've been a woman for the past 35 years and still enjoy it.
Thank you for listening, any comments are welcome.
Liza
|
606.23 | Aha! | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Jan 07 1991 11:07 | 26 |
| Liza,
I think the difficulty is not that your English is imperfect, but
that you have not been part of the, how-should-I-label-it, American
social matrix. Since the start of the feminist movement in this
country (over twenty years ago), people have been learning the ways
in which women have been discouraged from showing their minds,
discouraged from using their minds, and discouraged from receiving
any valued rewards for using their minds.
Since you weren't around from the beginning, you missed learning
many of the sneaky tricks that were used and have been found out.
Here-and-now the assumption is that you know about them, so no one
talks about them. This works just as well as deliberately trying
to keep them secret! In sum: From the time a child is born, it is
taught and trained in ways that promote the success of men, and
handicap women. The `mere' fiat of the Soviet government that
women and men be treated alike would not work -- because the Soviet
government (like everyone else) had not yet learned all the subtleties
of how women and men are treated differently.
Would anyone like to comment on the idea of a tutorial note on the
basic women-men "stuff" feminism has brought to light over the past
few decades?
Ann B.
|
606.24 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | each according to their gifts... | Mon Jan 07 1991 11:18 | 6 |
| A tutorial note is a good idea as long as it is merely commentary and
presentation, and debates can rage elsewhere. Too much energy has been
spent here trying to "tutor" already....
-Jody
|
606.26 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | freedom: not a gift, but a choice | Mon Jan 07 1991 13:27 | 36 |
| ye cats, I'm completely in agreement with .25:
> In making this statement, you have defined the stereotypical male roles
> (breadwinner, athlete, et cetera) as success and the stereotypical
> female roles (homemaker, artist, et cetera) as failure....
> The truth is that what children are taught are not just limiting for
> women; they are limiting for all people. And that teaching is not just
> limited to sexual roles; people are limited in all manner of expression
> and behavior -- that which is different from the norm is discouraged in
> many, many forms, not just sexual stereotypes.
> -- edp
Yes, the definitions are sexist, but more than that they just buy into
the concept of 'success' in our society. To some extent, my own burdens
have been made heavier by this concept, since I have chosen to try to
do parts of both sexes' stereotypical roles.
Men and women both have made the point that often,
the women's movement has tried to achieve equality in the men's
world of success (the stereotypical def) rather than to remove the
stereotyped defs that restrict both men and women. I see some movement
in the latter direction, thank goodness.
That said, what .23 said is still true: girl and boy children are
taught and trained in ways that promote success as defined by society,
and those ways still tend to restrict us to stereotypically defined
roles, and the 'successful' roles are the male ones.
So don't ever say again, "only a housewife" or "she doesn't work" for a
woman at home raising children. And don't look askance at a man
running a daycare center (as is our current one).
Sara
totally unrelated comment: I hate this editor.
|
606.27 | How are interests developed and success measured? | NETMAN::BASTION | Fix the mistake, not the blame | Mon Jan 07 1991 13:29 | 16 |
| re .25
I agree that one can become a successful homemaker. However, that
success is not valued as much as that of a scientist, doctor, lawyer,
architect, engineer, etc.
As for artists, for example, how many *American* male dancers have
achieved success? That training begins at an early age, when boys tend
to be developing their interest in sports. How many of those boys
would be teased for showing an interest in dance?
It all depends on how success is measured and how talent is developed.
Would that it could be gender and race blind.
Judi
|
606.28 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | freedom: not a gift, but a choice | Mon Jan 07 1991 13:37 | 1 |
| I define success for myself.
|
606.29 | I did say that. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Jan 07 1991 13:56 | 16 |
| My definition of success is in 529.9.
I still hold by what I wrote in this note: Girl-children and
boy-children are both raised in ways that create successful men.
For example: A housewife-in-training is assured that her goal
is to make her husband (sic)� comfortable, satisfied, etc., and
*thereby* become successful and happy and good stuff like that.
His goal is to be happy; her goal is to make him happy. 'Nuff said.
Like I said: This is among the basics, as covered in _The_Feminine_
_Mystique_ by Betty Friedan. (I'll bet it's also in _The_Second_Sex_
by Germaine Greer but (blush) I've never read it.)
Ann B.
� No comments from the Peanut Gallery, please. :-)
|
606.31 | Simone de Beauvoir(e??) | GIGI::HETRICK | | Mon Jan 07 1991 15:48 | 1 |
| Germaine Greer?
|
606.32 | | GIGI::HETRICK | | Mon Jan 07 1991 15:49 | 1 |
| notes collision
|
606.33 | I've lost my mind | PENUTS::SEMYONOV | | Mon Jan 07 1991 16:58 | 13 |
|
RE: .23
People can not be encouraged or discouraged to show their minds or
the lack of it. Galua was handicapped by birth, education, surroundings
but it did not prevent him from founding one of the most fascinating
branches of mathematics in his early teens. The same goes for
Sophia Kovalevskaia.
By the way I've read information that was supposed to educate me on
based-on-sex-discrimination subject. Don't you think you are spending
more time fighting for your rights than actually using them?
Liza
|
606.34 | | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Mon Jan 07 1991 19:49 | 15 |
| RE: .33
> Don't you think you are spending more time fighting for your rights
> than actually using them?
Interesting observation, Liza. That's the great American pastime.
Thanks for your insight. It's not often that we get to hear the
opinion of someone who is not culturally and emotionally immersed.
IMHO, Americans are obsessed with rights. We spend more time worrying,
complaining, arguing about being controled than we do about taking
control of ourselves. Litigation is rampant in America. Courage is
rare.
Mary
|
606.35 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Mon Jan 07 1991 20:18 | 41 |
| Re: .27
> I agree that one can become a successful homemaker. However, that
> success is not valued as much as that of a scientist, doctor, lawyer,
> architect, engineer, etc.
Valued by whom? The problem is not necessarily that of the intrinsic value of
the various professions, but of the subjective value we place on them, and that
we STILL divide them into "women's work" and "men's work". I measure success by
how happy the person is - I am a hedonist in the old fashioned philosophical
sense of the word.
Re: .33
> Galua was handicapped by birth, education, surroundings
> but it did not prevent him from founding one of the most fascinating
> branches of mathematics in his early teens.
And getting killed in a stupid macho duel... (By the way, in the U.S. we spell
his name "Galois".) Likewise my hero Srinivasa Ramanujan - who taught himself
mathematics from a book and, practically singlehandedly, founded modern
number theory.
> Don't you think you are spending more time fighting for your rights than
> actually using them?
Ah, that's the great American Puritan ethic at work again. You aren't allowed to
*enjoy* anything. It has to be for some higher ideal... Likewise, you are never
allowed to be satisfied.
I'm not certain, but perhaps you were trying to say that men achieve more
scholastically, for whatever reason, and so are disproportionately rewarded? I
believe this to be true - and believe that this is one of the subtle roots of
sexism in our society. It starts early, and the differences are multiplied as
time goes on.
On the other hand, half breed mongrels like me are smarter than the rest of
you - hybrid vigor doncha know.
-- Charles
|
606.37 | then again, what if... | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | freedom: not a gift, but a choice | Tue Jan 08 1991 08:41 | 5 |
| > If a company promoted only geniuses to senior positions ...
-edp! get real!
:-) :-) :-) :-) :-)
|
606.38 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Jan 08 1991 08:59 | 32 |
|
I seem to have grown up in a different environment to this.....
My mum and dad bought up my sister, myself, and my brothers to be
independent.
So when we wanted to set up on our own, we could do so without any
help from anyone else.
From the practical side of sewing on buttons, mending fuses, cooking,
ironing, wall-papering, painting, balancing a cheque-book, complaining
about faulty goods/workmanship...........
It was quite useful really, we did all the chores around the house, not
just the boring ones.
In school my parents encouraged us to do what we enjoyed most, for me
that was anything to do with numbers,science, and sport, for my sister,
art,needlework, and marquetry, for one of my brothers it was metalwork
and woodwork, for the other it was anything to do with caring for
people (he is now a mental nurse).
None of this was forced on us.
As I went to an all-girls school, I was never taught that girls can or
can't do a,b,or c better than boys, I assumed that people could do as
much or little as they wanted, or were able.
The only influence here might have been on my brother, as my mother is
a nursing officer, and on my sister, as my father is a cabinet maker.
Heather
|
606.39 | just my opinion... | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Jan 08 1991 09:55 | 16 |
| re Heather, you are lucky to have been raised the way you were. Many
of us weren't. Some children are encouraged to believe that they are
so stupid that they couldn't achieve even the most average success no
matter how hard they might try.
re .33, perhaps the reason that some people in the US (or elsewhere)
continue to fight for (women's) rights is because some people believe
that there are more to rights than that which affects mathematical
geniuses. As has been said before in various ways in this notesfile,
equality between the sexes is not when female geniuses have the same
opportunities for success as male geniuses. It is when the average
female schmuck has the same opportunity for success as the average male
schmuck and that is still not the case in the USA.
Lorna
|
606.40 | | MOMCAT::TARBET | How comes ye fishin' here? | Tue Jan 08 1991 12:36 | 15 |
| <--(.36)
Eric, I'm not sure I follow your reasoning in this. To me, the only
implication of men having a higher SD is that men of any given
intelligence will test out over a wider range than women, ie that it is
less easy to figure out a man's "real" score from his test score than
to figure out a woman's "real" score from her test score. To take your
example, if men have s=16, then a man who would test at IQ 100 under
ideal conditions (ie, 100 is his "real" score) might test anywhere from
84 to 116, whereas a woman with the same "real" score would test in the
range 85..115, ie 15 points either way rather than 16.
Could you explain your reasoning a bit more?
=maggie
|
606.41 | even "standard deviation" is ambiguous w/o context | TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Tue Jan 08 1991 14:50 | 24 |
| Woops, bit of a statistical miscommuniation.
Could be - standard deviation from the mean. That's what -edp was
referring to. This higher the standard deviation from the mean, the
"wider" the bell curve, and therefore the more people that occur on the
extremes. Therefore if women had a smaller deviation from the mean,
then there would be fewer female geniuses, and likewise fewer female
morons. (I did noticed -edp's bias in that he discusses the
implications on the higher-than-average end of the scale without
discussing the implications on the lower-than-average end of the
scale.)
On the other than, could be standard deviation in measurement, meaning
how far off, on average, the measured result is from the "real result"
(although in the case of IQ, what is the "real result"?) The only way
to test this sort of standard deviation would be to give the test to
people multiple times. If women had lower standard deviations, it would
mean that women would bemore likely to get the same score the second
(and third, etc.) times round on the test than men.
So which is it? I dunno. Just pointing out that either could be
correct depending on the data.
D!
|
606.42 | Liza Semyonov | PENUTS::SEMYONOV | | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:29 | 9 |
| Re .39: It is never late to learn instead of dwelling on the past,
complaining and begging for opportunity to succeed.
There is something I do not understand, though. Women want to be recognised
in men-dominated society. They want to be successful according to the
standards determined by men. Where is women's creativity and initative?
Why they can not invent their own standards and sets of values instead of
borrowing?
|
606.43 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:39 | 5 |
| re .42, I wasn't "complaining and begging." I was merely offering my
opinion.
Lorna
|
606.44 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:40 | 4 |
| re .42, "Where is women's creativity and initiative?"
Unrecognized!
|
606.45 | we're trying | DECWET::JWHITE | bless us every one | Tue Jan 08 1991 15:53 | 8 |
|
re:.42
i believe many people, yea even in this notesfile, are trying
very hard to 're-invent' the standards by which people are valued
in our society. it's a rather tricky manouever when there are
powerful people and institutions that have a vested interest in
the status quo.
|
606.46 | How to laugh with statistics | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Tue Jan 08 1991 20:44 | 19 |
| Re: .36
> Have you considered the mathematical implications of this?
Yes. My M.S. degree is in Applied Math. But I found the humorous
implications to be more *fun* than the mathematical implications.
And yes, it was the s.d. from the mean, i.e. the central tendency of
the scores. But as D! pointed out, the same would hold true at the
low end as well.
> I would be interested in knowing what the standard deviations are
> alleged to be.
Like I said, can't remember any sources. It's something I heard or
read in an Education course as an undergrad. Don't even know if it
was a reputable study, but it makes for a helluva good pun IMHO.
Mary
|
606.49 | | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Wed Jan 09 1991 11:42 | 31 |
| Of course, we are also assuming that
-- the test is an unbiased estimator of IQ.
-- the test is predictive at the +2 SD level.
-- higher IQ (at the +2 SD level) makes one more suitable for
vice-presidential roles. (Try explaining *that* to Dan Quayle!)
There's a pretty good body of information about gender/age/ethnic biases
in IQ tests. For example the analogy question
mercenary::soldier == hack::writer
was answered correctly by twice as many men as women on a recent SAT test.
IQ tests do not appear to measure negotiation skills, communication skills,
or wisdom (as opposed to knowledge) -- all of which seem to be more
necessary at the vice-presidential level than math/verbal/spatial ability.
IQ tests establish some of their spread by giving priority to quick,
correct answers (rather than correct answers that were given more thought).
I would suspect this would lead to superficial decisions when complex
problems (with no "right" answer) are to be dealt with -- another reason
not to choose a high-IQ person for a decision-making task.
Furthermore, at the +2 and +3 standard deviation level, I suspect that
only a few incorrect answers will have a large effect. I.e., it might
be the case that 100 correct answers out of 100 gives you an IQ of 200,
while 99 out of 100 gives you an IQ of 150. Thus, I would tend to
mistrust anyone who chooses a 150 IQ person over a 140 IQ person
"because of that person's higher IQ," suspecting that the 150 IQ person
is really a 140 IQ person who made a single lucky guess.
Martin.
|
606.50 | | COBWEB::SWALKER | | Wed Jan 09 1991 13:57 | 12 |
|
The other related question that comes to mind here is test calibration;
i.e., what was the IQ of the test writers? I've seen theories that
say that above a certain point people's IQ scores begin to slide
backwards somewhat, because they "over-think" their answers (mind you,
I've always wondered how they test this), and that therefore any
scores beyond a certain point should be considered equivalent. If this
is true, the standard deviation at the high end may not be as meaningful
as statistics would lead us to believe.
Sharon
|
606.51 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante divorcee | Wed Jan 09 1991 15:59 | 7 |
|
< We rarely hear about the great
< idiots of history. (Political leaders excepted.)
< -- edp
Now this is a hall of fame comment if I ever heard one. Well said. liesl :*)
|
606.52 | It certainly was high on the pith/byte ratio too!:-) | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | Nutcracker Protocol Honeymoon Suite | Wed Jan 09 1991 18:17 | 1 |
|
|
606.53 | | IE0010::MALING | Working in a window wonderland | Wed Jan 09 1991 23:41 | 7 |
| Re: .51
Rats! liesl, you beat me to it. A real hall of famer.
Eric, I like your sense of humor. :-)
Mary
|
606.56 | Dusting off ancient neurons, he writes | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Thu Jan 10 1991 11:45 | 19 |
| re: .54, .55:
Yes, IQ tests are unbiased indicators of IQ, since IQ is defined
as what an IQ test says the IQ is. (Actually, "intelligence" is
defined as "what an IQ test measures," but it works out the same.)
Oops. I sort-of knew that, but was trying to distinguish between
the number that results from an IQ test and real-world intelligence,
suggesting that I'm not convinced that IQ tests accurately measure
intelligence.
By the way, in addition to standard deviation, one should also look
at higher-order measurements (skewedness, kurtosis).
-- skewedness measures whether the distribution is symmetric around the
mean: i.e., are there more folk below 80 IQ than there are above 120 IQ.
-- kurtosis measures how "pointy" the distribution is.
Martin.
|
606.58 | Disagreement with -.1 | LEDS::LEWICKE | IfItsWorthDoingItsWorthDoingToExcess | Thu Jan 10 1991 16:43 | 11 |
| re -.57
As mentioned previously there was an article in the Atlantic last
year that discussed success at work. How they defined success I don't
know, and the same for where they got their numbers. But anyway, they
said that the single best predictor of success at work was IQ as
measured by standardized tests with a corelation of ~.5. The next best
predictor was educational level achieved with a corelation of ~.1. In
other words, and employer would do better by giving an IQ test, than
looking at resumes, experience or education.
JOhn
|
606.59 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Jan 14 1991 08:11 | 22 |
|
Nobody's ever thought that people who do well in IQ tests are the people
who enjoy them, and the more you enjoy them, the better you score.
I used to do as many as I could get my hands on - I used to do the
same with crossword puzzles and theorems.
Now, some bright spark decided to give us IQ tests, and grade us into
streams, and also whether we did latin - or something else.
Well, I had no problems being graded in the top streams for maths and
science, they were problems fo me to sort out.
But I was hopeless at Latin, and French, well learning a language that
no-one speaks, and if anyone can figure out how you find out the sex of
a table, or a car, or a carpet.........
or work out how "familiar" you have to be to use Tu, then maybe I'd
have been better off.
Heather
|
606.60 | another one... (s-l-o-w-l-y the # increases) | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | lady of the darkness | Wed Sep 11 1991 13:58 | 34 |
|
From: NAME: BRUCE J RYAN @CORE
FUNC: CORPORATE CONTROLLER
TEL: 223-8302 <RYAN.BRUCE J AT A1 at CORA @ CORE>
Date: 09-Sep-1991
Posted-date: 09-Sep-1991
Precedence: 1
Subject: LYN BENTON - VICE PRESIDENT 2
To: See Below
I am pleased to announce the promotion of Lyn Benton to Vice
President.
In this capacity, Lyn will be responsible for the integration
of the business unit plans, implementation of the New
Management System, and corporate financial planning and
analysis.
Lyn has been with Digital since 1979 and has distinguished
herself in a series of positions as Manufacturing Plant
Controller in Westminster, Group Controller Small Systems
Manufacturing, and Finance/Operations Manager Low End Systems.
Before joining Digital, she was manager of operations analysis
at the Foxboro Company. Prior to this, Lyn held senior
management positions at several other manufacturing companies.
She holds an undergraduate degree from Northeastern University
and an MBA from Babson College.
Lyn has demonstrated leadership and professionalism in all her
work at Digital. Please join me in congratulating Lyn on her
promotion and wish her continued success in the future.
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