Word: chancellor
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Chairman, General Telephone & Electronics Corp.; Philip Caldwell, Chairman, Ford Motor Co.; Albert V. Casey, Chairman, American Airlines Inc.; Richard P. Cooley, Chairman, Wells Fargo & Co.; Donald W. Davis, Chairman, Stanley Works; Edwin D. Dodd, Chairman, Owens-Illinois Inc.; Myron DuBain, Chairman, Fireman's Fund Insurance Companies; Alexander Heard, Chancellor, Vanderbilt University; Henry J. Heinz II, Chairman, H.J. Heinz Co.; Matina S. Horner, President, Radcliffe College; T. Lawrence Jones, President, American Insurance Association; Vernon E. Jordan Jr., President, National Urban League Inc.; Robert E. Kirby, Chairman, Westinghouse Electric Corp.; William E. LaMothe, Chairman, Kellogg Co.; Sol M. Linowitz, Senior Partner...
...Britain, Labor Party Leader Michael Foot is bitterly opposed to the missiles; in West Germany, Chancellor Helmut Schmidt's Social Democratic Party is badly split on the issue; but one of the startling paradoxes of European politics is that the French Socialists, with four Communists in their Cabinet, come closest to sharing the Reagan Administration's determination to improve defense. Indeed, U.S. Secretary of State Alexander Haig heartily praises "the whole array of what I call security-related French attitudes...
...West Germany, Reagan's comments came at a particularly bad time. Only a fortnight ago, 250,000 people marched on Bonn protesting nuclear weapons. Chancellor Helmut Schmidt favors the deployment of 108 U.S.-made Pershing II and 96 cruise missiles by 1983 in order to counterbalance Soviet SS-20s targeted at Europe. But he is strongly opposed on this issue by an important faction of his Social Democratic Party. Indeed, growing popular opposition to Schmidt's endorsement of the medium-range missiles threatens to push him into early retirement. Willi Piecyk, chairman of the S.P.D. Young Socialists, warned...
After Reagan's remarks, some of Schmidt's Cabinet members told him that they were concerned about the matter, and the Chancellor acknowledged that Reagan's statements had been "possibly ambiguous." But Schmidt then reaffirmed his belief that the President's interpretation of NATO strategy "did not call the slightest detail into question...
Robert P. Cobb, executive vice-chancellor of KU, said yesterday that university lawyers are still studying the situation and the university will make a formal statement sometime next week after the Kansas state attorney general concludes his investigation of the situation...