Word: sununu
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...campaign manager for Jimmy Carter, Shaheen was elected to the New Hampshire State Senate in 1990. In 1996, Shaheen became the first female governor of New Hampshire, a post she held for three two-year terms. In 2002, she ran for the U.S. Senate, barely losing to John E. Sununu. She later served as a fellow at the IOP and served as national chair of Senator John F. Kerry’s presidential campaign. Given her experience in education and government at both the state and national level, Shaheen is a perfect...
...which has only limited jurisdiction--and only over insurers that raise capital in the public markets--has begun jockeying for a larger role. Republican Senator John Sununu of New Hampshire has explored proposals that would give power to the Treasury Department to oversee critical aspects of the industry, including accounting. A federal authority "could pick up patterns of behavior more effectively than 51 separate regulators," says Craig Berrington, general counsel at the American Insurance Association...
...Muslims serve in the United States armed forces and intelligence agencies, attempting to fight the very terrorists that they are suspected of being. Arab Americans have also risen to the highest echelons of power in this country, counting among them former Sen. George Mitchell D-Maine, Sen. John Sununu Jr., R-N.H., former Kerry Campaign Chairperson and Governor of New Hampshire Jeanne Shaheen and numerous members of Congress. Fox’s show fails to even include an Arab-American translator working in the “Counter Terrorism Unit,” even though many currently do. 24?...
Senator John E. Sununu MBA ‘91, in reference to the infamous prank the Engineers pulled. Sununu received a bachelors and a Masters degree from MIT in mechanical engineering...
...back to their war rooms. But when Lott tried to leave, Bush pulled him into a sitting room outfitted with more TV monitors and jangling phones. As the results of close Senate races came in, Bush placed congratulatory calls to Elizabeth Dole in North Carolina and John Sununu in New Hampshire, handed the phone to Lott, then dialed another number. "He clearly was having fun," Lott says. After the fifth call, Lott tried to excuse himself, telling Bush he needed to go back to his office. "No, no. Stay," Bush said. "Let's see how this thing turns...