Word: liaisons
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...candidate, he has delighted in exceeding low expectations. As President, he would relish the chance to make his critics eat their words once again. "I suspect that George Bush might surprise people by being bolder than expected," says Mitchell Daniels, a former head of the White House political- liaison office and current chief of the Hudson Institute, a conservative think tank. "He might break out of the mold...
...criticism. This vital process of eliciting continuous feedback is managed by the assistant to the director/patient advocate, a full-time position created about 15 years ago. The responsibilities of this person are primarily to hear, represent, and respond to patient concerns. The patient advocate also serves as a liaison to two advocacy groups, the Student Health Advisory Council for undergraduates and the UHS Consumer's Council for staff and faculty, which actively represent the interests of the Harvard community in the provision of care by UHS by reviewing UHS policies and procedures and interviewing candidates for certain professional positions. Suggestions...
Bush has seldom been without a safety net. When he gave up his congressional / seat in 1970 in an unsuccessful bid for the Senate, Nixon made him U.N. Ambassador. Other appointments followed: the Republican National Committee in 1973, liaison to China in 1974 and director of the CIA in 1976. In fact, it was Dole who had to move aside as chairman of the Republican National Committee in 1973 to make room for Bush...
...Harvard has such a mystique that Cambridge teachers tend to say, 'Oh, that place.' I hope to be sort of a liaison between Harvard and Cambridge," she adds...
...would strongly defend the reporting that was done in the Gary Hart case," Fouhy says. "I'm not going to say there was not a certain amount of smiling done on the part of some publications about the details of "Hart's liaison with Miami model Donna Rice...