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...summer internship program, which this yearwill provide funding for seven Kennedy Schoolstudents who would otherwise be unable to takepublic service summer jobs, is a student-runorganization, said Judy F. Kugel, the director ofthe Kennedy School's director of career services...

Author: By Susan B. Glasser, | Title: Park to Honor Kennedy's 70th | 5/29/1987 | See Source »

...more surprising because it was slow to get off the ground. Created in 1970, the consortium is funded by publicly and privately owned aircraft builders in France, Britain, West Germany and Spain. But it did not sell a single jet to a U.S. airline for seven years. Says Robert Kugel, an aerospace analyst at the Morgan Stanley investment firm: "U.S. carriers wouldn't touch European airliners with a ten-foot pole. They had a reputation for poor quality and maintenance." That perception gradually changed. By 1987 some 360 of the medium-range A300 (up to 375 passengers) and the A310...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Trouble on The Horizon | 5/11/1987 | See Source »

According to Judy F. Kugel, the Kennedy School's director of career placement, the CIA visit is a "standard" annual event which in the past has attracted from five to 30 students. She said she did not know how many students will speak with agency recruiters today...

Author: By Louisa C. Lund, | Title: Students Will Protest CIA Visit to K-School | 10/28/1985 | See Source »

...Kugel said the recruiters will make a brief presentation and talk individually to interested Kennedy School students...

Author: By Louisa C. Lund, | Title: Students Will Protest CIA Visit to K-School | 10/28/1985 | See Source »

...This time, Reagan was subdued, ministerial. Wearing a yarmulke, he promised that if ever Israel were forced to walk out of the United Nations, America would walk out too. He charmed and soothed the congregation. The cameras picked him up; they picked him up again at lunch, eating apricot kugel (a pudding) at the rabbi's home immediately thereafter. The television "bites" that evening warmed the hearts of thousands of uncertain Jewish voters in middle-class Long Island; the Jewish vote was essential if he was to carry New York...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Election '84: Campaign Snapshots: Crushed Geraniums and Gay Caucuses | 11/19/1984 | See Source »

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