Word: damm
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...cover "moving expenses," but that notation was blacked out and changed to "consulting fees." The recipients: Meese, Deputy White House Chief of Staff Michael Deaver and Administration Personnel Director E. Pendleton James, who got $10,000 each; Interior Secretary William Clark, who got $9,942; and Helene von Damm, Ambassador to Austria, who received...
...freshmen nominated as of 4 p.m. yesterday were Theresa Amato, Stuart Anlgang, Ied Ashford, Michael Baldock, Anthony Ball, Preeta Bansal, Saran Burgess, Jenniler Burton Ethan Cohen, Regan Coleman, Eggert Dagbjartsson, Gerlad Damm, Suzanne Dechy, Charles DiBona, Mark Eichorn, Erica Eisenberg, Andrew Fletcher, William Foulkes, M. Fima Friedman, Paul Gompers, Loralic Goss, Alison Harrington, Emily Harrison, Adrienne Headley, Ron Herman, Michael Hirschorn, Raquel Jacobson, Per Jebsen, Kerry Kelgar, Scott Kogan, Mary Kwak, Deborah I esinsohn, Brian Melindez, Alan Morre, Steven Nusshaum, An Posner, Marvin Putnam, William Rehling, Samuel Rickless, Mitch Rosner, Chris Roy, Charles Rudmick, Jill Ruttenberg, Jell Russan, Laura Robinson...
Helene von Damm, for several weeks now, has been in search of the great exodus. It is proving elusive. Not a bird or a plane, the great exodus is a phenomenon whose advent is confidently predicted by journalists every two years: the mass departure of political appointees from the Federal Government. Once in a while the journalists are correct. Lack of money, 18-hour days, media prying and policy failures send droves of discouraged reformers back to the family business...
...great-exodus season for the Reagan Administration. Von Damm, who is personnel director for the President, heeded the warnings and prepared lists of possible replacements after the governmental churning. But Von Damm cannot seem to capture a full-bodied great exodus...
...nothing to do with Schiavone's hiring detectives. Although he has done little to help the Reagan Administration gain labor support, the Secretary appears secure in his job, at least until Silverman completes his investigation. Donovan still has his defenders in the Administration, including Helene von Damm, President Reagan's influential personal secretary, who next week is being promoted to White House personnel director. Donovan helped her raise campaign funds for Reagan in New Jersey in 1980; she subsequently urged that he be appointed to the Cabinet. But a White House aide conceded that "the level of embarrassment...