Word: fasã
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Over the past year, Faculty members consolidated their power through two groups—the Faculty Council, FAS??s elected, 18-member highest body, and the Caucus of Chairs, a newer, less formal group. The professors used their increased power to act against Summers, whose leadership style and stances on several issues they disliked, and Dean of the Faculty William C. Kirby, whom they perceived as mishandling FAS affairs...
...Mendelsohn says. “It’s hard to think that we can undertake major fundraising while an acting president is in office. I think we have significant issues in front of us.”And in January, the FAS Resources Committee warned the Faculty that FAS??s deficit could hit $100 million by 2010.“In the long term I think people do need to worry about a structural deficit,” Executive Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Nancy L. Maull told The Crimson...
...DEAS’s focus on “applied” knowledge makes the division’s mission subtly different from that of most College concentrations. Differences notwithstanding, DEAS continues to be an important portion of FAS. Up to now, however, its place beneath FAS??s liberal arts wing has somewhat obscured the division’s unique contributions. And its small size has kept it from competing effectively for engineering, applied math, and computer science students. These millstones could be lifted under a new plan, proposed by DEAS Dean Venkatesh “Venky?...
...look President Bok in the eye and say ‘No.’”Knowles first took the Faculty’s helm in 1991 under then-University President Neil L. Rudenstine, inheriting an $11.7 million budget deficit. The dean proceeded to tighten belts across FAS??provoking a small outcry when he cut 10 staff positions at the Semitic Museum. He had nearly erased the deficit by 1996.Knowles returns to the deanship as FAS faces possible deficits yet again, resulting from a billion-dollar building boom and rapid growth in the Faculty?...
Knowles first took the Faculty’s helm in 1991 under then-University President Neil L. Rudenstine, inheriting an $11.7 million budget deficit. The dean proceeded to tighten belts across FAS??provoking a small outcry when he cut 10 staff positions at the Semitic Museum. He had nearly erased the deficit...