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...Summer Urban Program (SUP), a collaborative effort between Harvard’s Phillips Brooks House Association (PBHA) and the Boston Youth Fund, was recognized as a finalist for Massachusetts’ Carter Partnership Award for Campus-Community Collaboration last night...

Author: By Gerald C. Tiu, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: PBHA Finalist for Carter Award | 4/10/2007 | See Source »

...Carter Partnership Award went to “School Readiness for All,” a Roxbury preschool education initiative spearheaded by national non-profit Jumpstart in collaboration with Northeastern University, Suffolk University, and Wheelock College...

Author: By Gerald C. Tiu, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: PBHA Finalist for Carter Award | 4/10/2007 | See Source »

Organized by Massachusetts Campus Compact, a higher education organization representing 65 college and university presidents in the Bay State, the Massachusetts Carter Partnership Award recognizes successful collaborations between colleges or universities and community groups that work to resolve critical problems within communities...

Author: By Gerald C. Tiu, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: PBHA Finalist for Carter Award | 4/10/2007 | See Source »

...stick to their initial ideology for at least a term or two. So why do Justices, legally sophisticated and surely familiar with their own minds, change at all? Some experts say it's the political environment (Chief Justice Warren Burger, appointed by Richard Nixon, was most liberal when Jimmy Carter was President and most conservative under Ronald Reagan). Others say Justices particularly skilled in persuasion sway their more malleable brethren. A more hopeful theory is that cases are so thoroughly briefed and argued by the time they reach the court that the truly compelling side, regardless of ideology, wins...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Drifters | 4/5/2007 | See Source »

Judging from his rsum, Tullman has had a ton of fun. A bureaucrat turned serial entrepreneur, Tullman began his career in the Office of Management and Budget of the Carter and Reagan administrations, then earned an advanced degree in social anthropology at Oxford. "Working in Washington was a great experience," he says. "But it also helped me understand that the problems we face in the country won't be solved there. They'll be solved locally, and business will have to play a critical role...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Chasing Paper from Medicine | 3/30/2007 | See Source »

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