Word: daniell
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...approximately 100 issues, in which more than 300 pieces appeared on the editorial page, only eight articles focused on Jews, Israel or Hillel. Of these eight, two were written by Daniel M. Suleiman '99, one of the Crimson executives in question, and one was written by a non-Jew. Thus, about 2 percent of the articles on the editorial page were written by Jews about Jewish topics. While this is slightly less than the percentage of Jews in the national population, the College's population is estimated at 15 to 20 percent Jewish at the least. The Crimson aspires...
...Suleiman's March 9 column and reviewed in the March 13 Arts section. "Arguing the World" focuses on the lives and intellectual development of four New York-born Jewish intellectuals, all from working class backgrounds, who attended City College in the 1930s--the late Social Democrat Irving Howe, centrists Daniel Bell and Nathan Glazer and neo-conservative Irving Kristol...
...Daniel Yergin and Joseph Stanislaw are co-authors of The Commanding Heights: The Battle Between Government and the Marketplace That Is Remaking the Modern World...
...Schoenberger '99, Elizabeth S. Zuckerman '99 Design Editors: Henry H. Kim '01, Rachel E. Kramer '99 Sports Editors: Eduardo Perez-Giz '99, Richard B. Tenorio '00 Editorial Editors: Adam I. Arenson '00, Geoffrey C. Upton '99 Photo Editor: Ronald Y. Koo '00 Business Editors: Jonathan I. Goldberg '00, Daniel A. Shapiro '00 Online Editor: Oni J. Blackstock...
...TIME Wall Street columnist Daniel Kadlec has been worried about an overvalued market for, well, as long as it's been overvalued. But these days, he concedes, the numbers don't matter anymore. "You can't fight a bull market like this," he says, because it comes out of "a perfect economic situation" -- earnings have been OK, interest rates are still low, and Asia's problems have been "shoved to the background," he says. "You have to respect what's going on." Investors get the same advice as ever: Jumping into stocks whole hog is still a dangerous proposition, even...