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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neocon who wrote (219418)1/17/2002 11:21:43 AM
From: TigerPaw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Condoleeza Rice, not Condolina
I would add that to the spell checker if SI supported a spell checker. Spelling is not me forte, and it sometimes causes trouble but if I stop to look up each word I lose whatever train of thought I might have.
TP



To: Neocon who wrote (219418)1/17/2002 11:22:29 AM
From: goldworldnet  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Biography: Condoleezza Rice

President-elect George W. Bush selected Dr. Condoleezza Rice to be his
National Security Advisor on December 17, 2000. She had been a Hoover
Senior Fellow and Professor of Political Science at Stanford University
before taking an academic leave of absence for a year during which time
she conducted research and served as primary foreign policy advisor to
the Bush Presidential Campaign.

She recently completed a six-year tenure as Stanford's Provost in June
1999, during which she was the institution's chief budget and academic
officer. As Provost she was responsible for a $1.5 billion annual budget
and the academic program involving 1,400 faculty members and 14,000
students. While Dr. Rice was instrumental in creating several new and
innovative academic programs and initiatives, she also reduced $20
million in base budget costs of the university, balanced the budget in the
first year, and reported budget surpluses during the rest of her tenure as
Provost.

As a professor of political science, Dr. Rice joined the Stanford faculty in
1981 and won two of its highest teaching honors - the 1984 Walter J.
Gores Award for Excellence in Teaching and the 1993 School of
Humanities and Sciences Dean's Award for Distinguished Teaching. Her
teaching and research interests included the politics of East-Central
Europe and the former Soviet Union, the comparative study of military
institutions, and international security policy. She pursued these
specialties in academia and in government service.

At Stanford, she was a member of the Center for International Security and
Arms Control, a Senior Fellow of the Institute for International Studies,
and a Fellow (by courtesy) of the Hoover Institution. Her books include
Germany Unified and Europe Transformed (1995) with Philip Zelikow,
The Gorbachev Era (1986) with Alexander Dallin, and Uncertain
Allegiance: The Soviet Union and the Czechoslovak Army (1984). She
also has written numerous articles on Soviet and East European foreign
and defense policy, and has addressed audiences in settings ranging from
the U.S. Ambassador's Residence in Moscow to the Commonwealth Club
to the 1992 Republican National Convention.

From 1989 through March 1991, the period of German reunification and
the final days of the Soviet Union, she served in the Bush administration as
Director, and then Senior Director, of Soviet and East European Affairs in
the National Security Council, and as Special Assistant to the President for
National Security Affairs. In 1986, while an international affairs fellow of
the Council on Foreign Relations, she served as Special Assistant to the
Director of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In 1997, she served on the Federal
Advisory Committee on Gender - Integrated Training in the Military.

She is a member of the boards of directors for the Chevron Corporation,
the Charles Schwab Corporation, the William and Flora Hewlett
Foundation, the University of Notre Dame, the International Advisory
Council of J.P. Morgan and the San Francisco Symphony Board of
Governors. She is a Founding Board Member of the Center for a New
Generation, an educational support fund for schools in East Palo Alto and
East Menlo Park, California and is Vice President of the Boys and Girls
Club of the Peninsula. Her past board service has encompassed such
organizations as Transamerica Corporation, Hewlett Packard, the
Carnegie Corporation, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, The
Rand Corporation, the National Council for Soviet and East European
Studies, the Mid-Peninsula Urban Coalition and KQED, public
broadcasting for San Francisco.

Born November 14, 1954 in Birmingham, Alabama, she earned her
bachelor's degree in political science, cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa,
from the University of Denver in 1974; her master's from the University of
Notre Dame in 1975; and her Ph.D. from the Graduate School of
International Studies at the University of Denver in 1981. She is a Fellow
of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has been awarded
honorary doctorates from Morehouse College in 1991, the University of
Alabama in 1994, and the University of Notre Dame in 1995.

usinfo.state.gov

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