Word: chaired
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Regardless of broader curricular review changes, new History Department requirements could still go forward, according to the department’s chair, Andrew D. Gordon ’74. These changes could be implemented in the fall 2007, Gordon said...
...plays and sketches several times over the past decades. Benjamin J. Toff ’05, who directed a lesser-known Durang play, “The Vietnamization of New Jersey,” just last year, was in contact with Durang throughout the production. Toff was also co-chair of The Crimson’s editorial board. Durang now teaches in the Playwriting Program at the Juilliard School in New York City. The Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club’s publicity coordinator, Mary E. Birnbaum ’07, wrote in an e-mail that “Durang...
...father, Walter J. Sullivan, took over Edward’s council seat.The younger Michael Sullivan was first elected to the City Council in 1993, and served as mayor from 2002 through 2005. Under Cambridge’s form of government, members of the council elect their chair, who then serves as mayor.Robert Winters, editor of the Cambridge Civic Journal, said that he thinks Sullivan will be capable of serving as both councillor and county clerk at the same time.“Michael is so competent in his job as a city councillor that he can do in a short...
...Hochschild is Jayne professor of government and professor of African and African American Studies. Christopher S. Jencks is Wiener professor of social policy. Jane J. Mansbridge is Adams professor of political leadership and democratic values. Nancy L. Rosenblum is clark professor of ethics in politics and government and chair of the Government Department, and William Julius Wilson is Geyser University professor...
...According to Eliot, president from 1869 to 1909, Lowell was “resolute,” even tactless, in pursuing what he believed to be the truth, yet “ingenious, though abrupt, in justifying those decisions.” In contrast, Eliot, who had held the chair at the meetings of all faculties, usually listened when they voiced their concerns and tolerated their digressions. Eliot observed: “The Faculty is a ruminating animal, chewing a cud a long time, slowly bringing it into a digestible condition; then comes the process of assimilation which is gradual...