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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Former President Gerald Ford To Be Among IOP Fellows
Institute of Politics to welcome 1999 spring fellows, including a
former
governor, U.S. senator, and others
The 38th president of the United States, the former governor of
South
Carolina, a former U.S. senator from Arkansas, the current associate
deputy
attorney general for the U.S. Department of Justice, and a former
attorney
general for Minnesota are among the fellows joining the Institute of
Politics (IOP) as spring 1999 fellows. In residence for the spring term
will
be:
Gerald Ford, Heffernan Visiting Fellow, 38th president of
the
United States; Barbara Barrett, executive vice president of the
International Women's Forum and Republican candidate for
governor
of Arizona in 1994; David Beasley, governor of South Carolina
from 1995 to 1998; Hubert H. "Skip" Humphrey
III, attorney general of Minnesota from 1983 to 1998 and the
DemocraticFarmer Labor candidate for governor of Minnesota in
1998;
David Pryor, U.S. senator from Arkansas from 1979 to 1996;
Jonathan Schwartz, current associate deputy attorney general
for the U.S. Department of Justice; William O. Taylor, chairman
of
the board and chief executive officer for the Globe Newspaper Co.;
and
Myrth York, the first woman Democratic candidate for
governor of
Rhode Island.
"The mission of the Institute of Politics is to endeavor to
inspire
young folks to become involved in politics, and this group is certainly
inspirational," said IOP Director Al Simpson. "I eagerly
look
forward to the interaction that will take place in the classrooms, the
offices, and the halls among our students, our fellows, and an old
friend
from his Wyoming days, Gerry Ford. Dave Pryor and I came to the
U.S.
Senate together and we'll see if we can stir up a little debate as
in
days of yore! It promises to be an outstanding semester for us
all."
The Fellows will introduce themselves and participate in a panel
discussion on "Personal Perspectives on Politics" at 6 p.m.,
Tuesday, Feb. 16, in the ARCO Forum of Public Affairs. The public is
invited
to attend.
The IOP, located in the Kennedy School of Government, was
founded in
1966 to encourage undergraduate student interest in the dynamics
of
politics and to increase understanding and cooperation between the
academic community and the political world.
The Fellows
Gerald Ford, 38th president of the United States, will be in
residence March 16 and 17, as an Elizabeth B. and Dennis B.
Heffernan
Visiting Fellow. Ford served as vice president from 1973 to 1974 and
then
assumed the presidency after the resignation of Richard Nixon in
1974.
Prior to his vice presidency, Ford was a member of the U.S. Congress
from
Michigan from 1949 to 1973. Following his term as president, Ford
has
been active on behalf of the Republican Party and charitable causes,
serves
on corporate boards, and speaks frequently before a variety of
audiences.
Barbara Barrett, executive vice president of the
International Women's Forum since 1997, was a Republican
candidate for governor of Arizona in 1994 -- the first woman to ever
run
for that office in the state. In 1996, she was the Arizona campaign
chair for
Steve Forbes for President. She has previously served as chair of the
U.S.
Secretary of Commerce National Conference on Export and
International
Policy, as a member of President Reagan's Advisory Committee
on
Trade Negotiations, and as an adviser to Secretary of Defense Dick
Cheney.
She was deputy administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration
from
1988 to 1989 -- the first woman to hold that position -- and
president and
CEO of the American Management Association from 1997 to 1998.
She is an
international business and aviation lawyer, and president and chief
executive officer of Triple Creek Guest Ranch, in Darby, Mont. Barrett
received a B.A. in political science, a master's in public
administration, and a J.D. from Arizona State University.
David Beasley served as governor of South Carolina from
1995
to 1998 and chaired the Republican Governor's Association
from
1997 to 1998. As a 20-year-old college student, he ran for the South
Carolina House of Representatives, won the election, and was a
representative from 1979 to 1992. During his 13 years in the South
Carolina legislature, Beasley served as majority whip and House
speaker
pro tempore -- the youngest person to reach those posts in the
United
States. In the South Carolina House, Beasley was also chairman of the
Education and Public Works Committee, chairman of the Joint
Legislative
Study Committee on Education, and vice chairman of the Joint
Legislative
Committee on Children. He served on the South Carolina Mining
Council and
on the South Carolina Board of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes,
as well
as many other community, civic, and statewide committees. Beasley
has a
J.D. from the University of South Carolina School of Law.
Hubert H. "Skip" Humphrey III served as
attorney general of Minnesota from 1983 to 1998 and was the
Democratic-
Farmer Labor candidate for governor of Minnesota in 1998. He
served as
president of the National Association of Attorneys General from 1993
to
1994, as senator in the Minnesota State Senate from 1972 to 1982,
and
worked as a lawyer from 1970 to 1982. Humphrey was also chair of
the
Minnesota Drug Abuse Resistance Education Program and founder of
the
Partnership for a Drug Free Minnesota. He currently serves on the
President's Council on Sustainable Development. In 1996 he
received
the Policy Maker of the Year award from the Minnesota Organization
on
Adolescent Pregnancy, Prevention, and Parenting. Since 1986
Humphrey
has been the attorney general with the highest re-election totals in
the
state's political history and was the first attorney general in the
nation to bring an antitrust and consumer fraud lawsuit against the
tobacco industry. He also developed the most comprehensive child
support
initiative in the state as well as created one of the first DNA labs in
the
nation to assist in fighting crime. Humphrey received his B.A. in
political
science from American University in 1965 and his J.D. from the
University
of Minnesota Law School in 1969.
David Pryor served as a U.S. senator from Arkansas from
1979
to 1996. During that time he was secretary of the Democratic
Conference,
was third in the Senate Democratic leadership, and was a member of
the
Senate Democratic Steering Committee. Pryor's first committee
assignment in the U.S. Senate was the Committee on Agriculture,
where he
served as chairman of the Agriculture Subcommittee on Agricultural
Production and Stabilization of Prices. He served on and chaired the
Senate
Special Committee on Aging, and chaired the 1995 White House
Conference
on Aging. Pryor also served on the Senate Finance Committee, the
Senate
Governmental Affairs Committee, and chaired the Committee's
Subcommittee on Federal Service, Civil Service, and Post Office. In
addition
to his career in the U.S. Senate, Pryor was governor of Arkansas from
1974
to 1978. In 1960 he was first elected to the Arkansas State House of
Representatives where he served three terms. Since his retirement
from
the Senate, Pryor has become a Fulbright Distinguished Fellow of Law
and
Public Affairs at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, and serves
as a
consultant to businesses. Pryor received his L.L.B. from the
University of
Arkansas School of Law in 1964 and his B.A. from the University of
Arkansas, Fayetteville, in 1957.
Jonathan Schwartz is currently associate deputy attorney
general for the U.S. Department of Justice. He was the coordinator of
a
number of issues between the Justice Department and the Office of
Independent Counsel Kenneth W. Starr. His primary focus was the
impact
of the decision by Starr's office to compel the testimony of
Secret
Service agents and officers. Schwartz also coordinates the
Department's Nazi gold-related activities and serves on the
five-
person Capital Case Review Committee, which recommends on a case-
by-
case basis whether federal prosecutors should be authorized to seek
the
death penalty against federal defendants. He also directs the
Department's response to state ballot initiatives to legalize
marijuana
for medical purposes. From 1991 to 1995, Schwartz was an attorney
in the
United States Attorney's Office, Southern District of New York.
Prior
to joining the U.S. Attorney's Office in New York, he served as a
law
clerk to Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. Schwartz has a
B.A.
from the University of Pennsylvania, a J.D. from Stanford Law School
and a
master's in philosophy in international relations from
Cambridge
University.
William O. Taylor is chairman of the board and chief
executive officer for the Globe Newspaper Co. After serving two
years in
the U.S. Army, Taylor joined The Boston Globe in 1956 and became
publisher in 1978. He is also a director of The New York Times Co.
Among
his many affiliations and community activities, Taylor is the director
of the
Boston Adult Literacy Fund, president of the board of trustees of the
Boston Public Library, and a trustee of Connecticut College. He is also
the
director of the United Way of America, director of the Center for
Foreign
Journalists, director of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, and a
trustee of
the International Crisis Group. He holds numerous honorary degrees
for his
work in journalism. Taylor received his B.A. from Harvard University
in
1954.
Myrth York was the first woman Democratic candidate for
governor of Rhode Island and the first person to defeat an incumbent
governor in a primary election in that state. She served in the Rhode
Island State Senate from 1991 to 1994, during which time she was a
member of the Senate Corporations Committee and in her second
term was
the chair of the Senate Health, Education and Welfare Committee --
the
first woman to hold that position. York was also a member of the
Minority
Business Enterprise Commission and the Permanent Legislative
Oversight
Committee in the Department of Children, Youth and Families. She is
an
attorney, who is also an officer and director of York Resources Inc. --
a
family-owned investment company. In 1974 she joined Rhode Island
Legal
Services working as a staff attorney and then as director of the
Domestic
Relations Unit. York currently serves on the board of directors of
Amos
House, a soup kitchen and shelter; Vocational Resources Inc.; the
Nature
Conservancy; and the national board of Clean Water Action.
Myrth York earned her B.A. from the University of Denver
and
received both a J.D. and a master of laws in taxation from Boston
University School of Law.
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New Fellows To Participate in Public Discussion
The Fellows (except for President Ford) will introduce themselves
and
participate in a panel discussion on "Personal Perspectives on
Politics" at 6 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 16, in the ARCO Forum of
Public
Affairs. The public is invited to attend
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Copyright
1999 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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