Word: controller
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Dates: during 2000-2000
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...proven ourselves as a team with a lot of character and a lot of talent," said junior winger Tammy Shewchuk, one of three Crimson players to earn First Team All-ECAC honors. "It's not fun when you're not in control of your own destiny, but we've been a very solid team all year and, when you compare the west to the east, I don't think there's any doubt that the ECAC is a stronger league. We've stayed in the top two or three all year long so I think that's a pretty good...
...Executive Director, without any accountability measures. Moreover, FLA does not inspect all of the possible violations, including certain health and safety regulations and women's rights issues. In addition, the FLA structured its Board of Directors so that industry and business have a majority of the votes and can control its policy changes. The university can wield very little, if any, influence in the FLA. The FLA has yet to inspect a single factory...
...when the best minds in the party came down to Austin, Texas, to help school him on everything from China policy to the complexities of the earned-income tax credit, Gore too has a history of arranging tutorials to help him hone his views: with Leon Fuerth on arms control, Reed Hundt on the new economy, the late Harvard professor Roger Revelle on climate change...
...room to like him, and Al Gore wants everyone to think he's right, George Bush wants everyone to know who's boss. He mocks advisers who try to impress him with arcana, insisting that they "speak English," and he frequently cuts people off in midsentence, keeping control of the conversation. He earns the loyalty of his staff by giving them broad authority, but he doesn't hesitate to remind even his closest advisers that he's the big dog, something he usually does with a sarcastic remark. While Gore may view few of the people close...
Anyone who wants to return to party bosses in back rooms (smoke filled or otherwise) selecting the nominee should vote for Bush. This campaign is mostly about control. Pick the candidates, flood 'em with squashing amounts of money and send 'em forth. Round up the cadre to provide a flying wedge. Anyone not on board had better consider himself dead meat as far as the party is concerned. George W. Bush is merely the cover boy in this campaign; the Republican Party bosses are the real candidates. DAN THOMPSON Elgin...