Word: marshaled
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...numerous awards, including the Presidential National Humanities Medal in 1999. He has also published 15 novels and moderated 10 of the televised presidential candidate debates over the course of the last five elections. Tracy “Ty” Moore ’06, a senior class marshal and member of the Senior Class Committee, said that he approved of HAA’s choice and that Lehrer had been picked “on account of his insight, compelling views, his personality, and that he’ll be an excellent speaker...
With only 2 million heelers, compared with some 10 million skateboarders, HSL can grow if it can turn the shoes into a lifestyle product, says Marshal Cohen, chief analyst at NPD Group. He suggests that HSL elevate the brand by working to make heeling an Olympic event. Having staged the Pan-Asian Heelys Challenge for three years, and with the first European competition kicking off next summer, "we think about that all the time," says Staffaroni. It worked for snowboarding...
...spring should have a significant impact on the search for a new president. Whoever takes over in Mass Hall will have the formidable task of setting Harvard back on course, and lessons from posterity cannot but help. Our next president must smooth over the difficulties that plagued Summers and marshal the full support of the Faculty for projects such as bringing to a conclusion and implementing the Harvard College Curricular Review and forging ahead with the Allston Expansion which will define the Harvard experience for decades. Without full and honest disclosure from the Faculty of why this presidency was unsuitable...
...Rush Hour” money. Their “Matrix”-like jumping and kicking seemed to defy gravity. As the performers managed to jump nearly three feet in the air, Hayek felt compelled to offer them a Hollywood contract. “If I ever need marshal arts training for a role, I know who to call,” she said...
...state across the region, a remarkable achievement for a politician-cleric who has neither been elected to any office nor completed his religious education. After hearing news of the destruction of the Shi'ite shrine in Samarra, al-Sadr cut his trip short to return to Iraq to marshal his Mahdi Army, a militia of bristling young Shi'ites who had swarmed the streets, torching Sunni mosques and girding for war. But a government-imposed curfew had closed airports and sealed borders, leaving al-Sadr locked out. His mood was surly. An aide told TIME that when he tried...