Word: presidentsã
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...also said that university presidents??unlike corporate executives or military leaders—do not have much “hard power,” such as the ability to hire and fire faculty members...
...ages of 40 and 46 respectively. Faust is 59 and, like Neil L. Rudenstine—the first man since before World War I to be chosen president while in his 50s—she will not occupy Mass. Hall for a 20-year tenure.The last two presidents??Summers and Rudenstine—came from outside of Harvard, but both had deep ties to the University, where they spent years as graduate students. Neither Cech, Etchemendy, nor Richard studied or taught here. Of the 22 confirmed candidates, only 11 went to or taught at Harvard.The search also suffered...
While Harvard’s most recent presidents??Lawrence H. Summers, Neil L. Rudenstine, and Derek C. Bok—did not earn their undergraduate degrees at Harvard, it was not debatable in 1908 whether an individual without a Harvard College degree could be chosen, Gomes says...
...interview last week, says that “soft power is the ability to get what you want through attraction rather than coercion.” He adds that university presidents??unlike corporate executives or military leaders—do not have much “hard power,” such as the ability to hire and fire faculty members...
...initiate a tournament, what is certain is that any potential change is still far off on the horizon. Getting the approval of the league’s athletic directors would be just the starting point of an arduous process that would ultimately end up with the eight Ivy presidents??and as one might recall from past musings on the lack of Ivy League inclusion in the Division I-AA football playoffs, the Ivy presidents are not a group receptive to rapid change in athletics. A potential stumbling block might be that extra games would result in a loss...