Word: georgetowner
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...crime wave that blossomed in Russia after the collapse of communism. Until Mexico's new democracy builds effective judicial institutions--and that may take a generation or more--thugs can run amuck. "Criminals were practically licensed under the P.R.I.," says Roy Godson, a national-security expert at Georgetown University. "The old rules have broken down...
RankInstitution %Black Faculty 1 Emory University 5.1% 2 University of Michigan 4.8% 3 Vanderbilt University 4.1% 4 Dartmouth College 4.0% 5 Johns Hopkins University 3.7% 5 University of Virginia 3.7% 7 Brown University 3.6% 8 Columbia University 3.4% 9 Georgetown University 3.3% 9 University of Pennsylvania 3.3% 11 Washington University 3.1% 12 Cornell University 2.7% 13 Duke University 2.6% 13 Stanford University 2.6% 15 Northwestern University 2.4% 16 University of Notre Dame 2.2% 17 Yale University 2.1% 18 Harvard University 1.9% 18 MIT 1.9% 18 Princeton University 1.9% 18 University of Chicago 1.9% 22 Tufts University 1.6% 23 Rice University...
...GEORGETOWN, TEXAS...
April 6, 1960. Senator John F. Kennedy, the wealthy and magnetic sex machine whom the Democrats will soon make their candidate for the presidency, is at home in Georgetown having dinner with his friend Bill Thompson and the delectable Judith Campbell, later to be known as Judith Campbell Exner. Kennedy's wife Jacqueline, pregnant with John Jr., is out of town...
Hersh's chapter on Exner is typical of the book. Most of the Georgetown dinner scene with her and Kennedy appeared in a 1988 PEOPLE magazine story by Kitty Kelley, a piece acknowledged by Hersh in his frustratingly brief notes on sources at the end of his book. (Kelley's story was even headlined "The Dark Side of Camelot.") But that big bag of money seems like a new touch. Exner told TIME she did not reveal it to Kelley because Kelley became irritated with her during an interview and walked out. Hersh supplies a corroborating witness, Martin E. Underwood...