Word: experts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...other top White House posts, the job of chief domestic affairs adviser will probably go to Martin Anderson, a senior fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution and an expert on welfare. A flexible conservative, Anderson played a major part in persuading Nixon to establish the volunteer army. Michael Deaver, another trusted aide, will be given a post that keeps him close to the new President and allows him to monitor Reagan's public performances...
Encouraged by even the modest accomplishments of this campaign, some Anderson aides are now contemplating forming a third-party movement based on their experiences. Anderson's direct-mail expert Tom Mathews, for example, says that should the candidate try to build a third party, he could count on $3 million a year from the campaign's loyal contributors...
Richard E. Pipes, Baird Professor of History and a Reagan foreign policy and defense adviser during the campaign, will be named to the Republican's State Department transition committee, sources said this week. A hard-line Soviet expert who opposes the pending arms limitation treaty and supports sharp increases in defense spending, Pipes stands out in the Harvard faculty's liberal plains like a Titan II missile...
Reagan aides--including William R. Van Cleave, chief of planning for the Defense Department transition, and Pipes himself--say he will probably fill the slot vacated by veteran Soviet expert Marshall D. Shulman, who served until last month as special adviser on Soviet affairs to Secretary of State Edmund S. Muskie...
...member of the Harvard faculty for 30 years, Wolff was an expert on the Balkans and the Byzantine Empire...