Word: neustadt
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Last year Ernest R. May replaced Richard E. Neustadt as the Director of the Institute. May had been slated earlier for the position but chose instead to become Dean of Harvard College, a not particularly pleasant office during the student protests of 1969 and 1970. Undoubtedly May, who is at heart an academic, finds himself more at home in the Institute setting where he can concentrate on writing his new book about foreign policy and dreaming up new Institute programs...
...policy and law or medicine. The ratio of applications to admissions is about 7 to 1. The Institute committed itself to funding the public policy program on the condition that each year after its founding in 1969 the amount of money it would initially provide would dwindle; presently Richard Neustadt and Don K. Price, dean of the Kennedy School, are looking for different sources of funding...
RICHARD E. NEUSTADT. He chairs the Platform Committee, which has distilled the party's planks out of the findings of a series of ten regional grassroots hearings, from the testimony of the presidential candidates, and from a massive document outlining "issue alternatives" researched by the Democratic Policy Council. Neustadt, 53, associate dean of Harvard's School of Government, comes from outside the professional political establishment; he has been an adviser to three Presidents and is a leading commentator on American politics. His 1960 book Presidential Power is a standard reference work on the Executive Branch...
...been caught between two reforms." Neustadt said. "The O'Hara Commission assumed delegates would be selected early while the McGovern Commission provided that they were chosen late...
...Neustadt has instructed the researchers to take into account the positions of the primary contenders when drawing up their alternative proposals. "We may be drafting language for the Wallace people to get their positions into good form for a floor fight." Liebman said. "It'll be interesting--and maybe immoral...