Word: guru
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With reference to the recent flood of articles about the departure of Agassiz Theatre technical guru Alan P. Symonds '69, I am adamant to have the last word...
...delegate authority to subordinates. Clinton, however, has meticulously designed his Administration to answer to him, not to the Cabinet barons who plagued his Democratic predecessor, Jimmy Carter. He personally approved every State Department official ranked Assistant Secretary and above, some 30 people. "He's his own foreign policy guru," says a senior adviser. Having laid down power lines of authority that all lead to the White House, Clinton does not know how to set them humming...
...that was finally brought before a jury last week. Masson, a scholar of Sanskrit who holds a Ph.D. from Harvard, contends that since the article was published he has been all but unemployable. No longer a therapist, he has written books including the critically acclaimed memoir My Father's Guru and recently taught media ethics at the University of Michigan, where he has been living in the home of his fiance, controversial feminist law professor Catharine MacKinnon. Malcolm continues under contract to the New Yorker, where her editor was her husband Gardner Botsford. She conceded on the witness stand that...
...wife (Dana Delany) and two kids. His life starts taking strange turns when an ex-girlfriend (Kim Cattrall) seeks his help in locating her missing son. The mission turns out to be a ruse to lead Harry to Senator Tony Kreutzer (Robert Loggia) -- presidential aspirant, television entrepreneur and guru of a political-religious movement known as New Realism. Kreutzer's neofascist aspirations have something to do with hallucinogenic drugs, new technology that enables people to interact with holograms, and a battle between underground political camps known as the Fathers and the Friends...
...Presidents Neil L. Rudenstine and Linda S. Wilson received glowing profiles in the Boston Globe. This year, there was a bit more balance in a Globe article on Henry Louis Gates Jr., chair of the Afro-American Studies Department, but as indicated by the headline ("Harvard's Skip Gates; guru, griot, gaditty), there was plenty of room for sucking...