Word: neils
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...York Times columnist followed by the public support of the AFL-CIO leadership weakened the University administration and left the protesters stronger than ever. The question now arises: Can the students’ advantage produce a solution in the best interests of everyone—workers, President Neil L. Rudenstine, administrators, student activists, the faculty, students and the University as a whole...
When University President Neil L. Rudenstine announced last May that he would resign effective June 30, 2001, it soon became clear that the search for Harvard's 27th president would be unlike any other search before. The nine-month long search for Harvard's 27th president would take the nine search committee members all over the country--from Stanford to Cornell to Columbia and Yale--and would require months of research and thousands of pages of secret communications. Technology would be used as never before, and for the first time, a woman would make the final round...
...around 1 p.m., President Neil L. Rudenstine—the seventh member of the Corporation—arrived for the afternoon's meeting, bringing along Fineberg in his role as provost. Throughout the next two hours, the Corporation functioned normally. No one mentioned to Fineberg that a decision had been made...
...demonstrators in Massachusetts Hall deserve our continued support. Although President Neil L. Rudenstine took a step in the right direction by announcing willingness to reopen the living wage issue by assembling a new committee, the demonstrators are justified in requesting specifics regarding the committee’s composition, mandate, powers and timetable. Harvard’s administration is far more powerful than the weary demonstrators and can force them out or wait them out without granting their requests, but it ought not to. The demonstrators have right on their side, in two ways. First, there is a powerful moral argument...
...faculty meeting called last week to discuss the sit-in, University President Neil L. Rudenstine announced his intention to form a new committee to reexamine issues of low-paid workers at Harvard...