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...Sadr does have one potential trump card: his strident anti-Americanism has helped him broaden his support base, so that many Iraqi Sunnis regard him as the only Shi'ite leader they can trust. Sunni groups contributed men and material to support the Mahdi Army's uprisings against U.S. forces, and elements of the Mahdi Army fought alongside Sunni insurgents in the battle of Fallujah in fall 2004. "He is somebody who has fought against the occupying forces," says Abdul Salam al-Kubaisi, spokesman for the Association of Muslim Scholars, the leading Sunni clerical body. "All other Shi'ite leaders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Wild Card | 2/26/2006 | See Source »

...easier for the newly appointed associate dean of advising, Monique Rinere, to establish a new advising program after the Faculty has approved a new system for concentrations rather than in the current state of uncertainty.One of the themes common to many curricular review reports has been “trust the students, trust the faculty,” and this is particularly relevant to the recommendations regarding timing of concentration choice. Summers, who in his recent resignation letter expressed a desire to make the Harvard experience commensurate with the quality of its students and faculty, seems to share this understanding...

Author: By Emily E. Riehl, | Title: Don’t Delay the Curricular Review, but Do Delay Concentration Choice | 2/23/2006 | See Source »

...rule by fist, fiat, furor, or fear, but rather by listening, building consensus, and creating a context for the institution to thrive.Leaders, as opposed to managers, are expected to have a broad vision of their institution, a set of ambitious but manageable goals, the skill to choose and trust lead staff members, the capacity to devise and implement strategies that allow them to advance toward their goals, and the agility to shift course when doing so seems necessary. In an authoritarian regime or in a corporation that is organized hierarchically, leaders can often proceed quite quickly and with relatively little...

Author: By Howard E. Gardner, | Title: Leaders Who Listen | 2/23/2006 | See Source »

...positions - a roughly 10 percent increase. He's not the only one concerned. At a Senate committee hearing last May, an official with the Government Accountability Office expressed misgivings about the industry's level of self-policing, saying that the NRC "in effect, relies on [plant operators] and trusts them to a large extent to make sure that their plants are operated safely." Residents of the Midwest might argue that companies like Exelon no longer deserve that trust...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Right Kind of Nuclear Leak | 2/23/2006 | See Source »

...terribly important that you be as open as you can be about what you’re doing, be very careful about what you promise and that you break your back to fulfill any commitments that you do make—and in that way very slowly build up trust in at least a substantial number of students and faculty...

Author: By Daniel J. T. Schuker, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: In Encore, Bok Faces Familiar Challenges | 2/22/2006 | See Source »

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