Word: ronald
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...criticized what we saw as the Carter administration’s dangerous and ineffective turn to the right in the aftermath of the Iranian hostage crisis and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, we thought that endorsing the Democrat would be hypocritical. For our purity, we got eight years of Ronald Reagan...
...longtime Corporation member Hugh D. Calkins ’45 told The Crimson in 1985. “I don’t want you to give ’til it hurts,” Stone would tell potential donors, according to former University treasurer D. Ronald Daniel. “I want you to give ’til it feels good.” A GOOD ‘FELLOW’ As an undergraduate, Stone concentrated in economics and was a member of the Owl Club. A Kirkland House resident, Stone captained the men?...
...Summers was an unconventional choice, but committee members were won over by the former Treasury secretary’s big ideas for Harvard’s future.“We agreed that we needed somebody more aggressive, more pushy, bolder,” former University Treasurer D. Ronald Daniel told The New York Times in 2003.But Summers lacked experience running an academic institution, and some observers have urged the committee to now select a candidate with more proven credentials in university administration.“The most important thing right now is to find somebody who understands the problems...
Small Step for the K-School January 21, 1981 Not many schools here have fewer female professors than Ronald Reagan’s cabinet. But the Kennedy School, with zero, does, and for most of the last term, student and women’s groups have called on the school to recruit, actively, women and minority faculty and students, and to scrap classroom policies they considered discriminatory. One women’s group even charged that the school’s lackadaisical search for women and minority faculty candidates has violated federal affirmative action hiring codes, a complaint still pending...
...after he was released that he used to hear the revolutionaries “complaining they couldn’t go to class because they had to guard.” After 14 months in captivity, the hostages were released on Jan. 20, 1981, the day of President Ronald Reagan’s inauguration. Harvard students, in the middle of their exams at the time, scrawled “The hostages are free!” in their blue books in celebration, The Crimson reported.“Nobody was hurt, nobody was killed. There was a great sigh...