Stories tagged with Gerald Ford
The Butt family, Texas grocery kings
By Ali Jones | February 27, 2008 at 8:34am | 2
Texas has Jerry Jones, Mark Cuban, Ross Perot, the Basses and the Hunts. And then there are the Butts.
Ben Stein, renaissance man
By A. James Memmott | December 6, 2007 at 9:35am | 0
Say “Bueller, Bueller” in a monotone and just about everybody in the free world knows you’re echoing Ben Stein as the drone of an economics teacher in the movie Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.
But while Ferris gave himself a day off, it would seem that Stein just can’t stop doing something.
Lawyer, actor, author, economist, television performer, talk show guest, presidential adviser, Stein, 63, belongs in the multi-tasking hall of fame.
Mukasey hearings double as Yale reunion
By A. James Memmott | October 22, 2007 at 8:24am | 0
The recent Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on the nomination of Michael Mukasey to be U.S. attorney general might have passed for a meeting of the Yale Law School alumni association.
Mukasey, class of 1967, was introduced to the committee by Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., also Yale Law class of ‘67.
You, too, could be a loser someday
By A. James Memmott | October 16, 2007 at 7:09am | 0
The script has changed.
Pointing to Al Gore, parents throughout the country may be telling their children that if they study hard, lead good lives and not become president they could be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
Gore is the co-winner of this year’s Peace Prize for sounding the alarm on global warming. He shares the prize with the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
While Gore may have fashioned a grand comeback, a look at the post-defeat careers of other recent unsuccessful presidential wannabes shows that there can be life, a good life at that, after losing. All have found things to do, sometimes lucrative things, and many have held elective office, most often in the U.S. Senate.
All have continued in public life and some have remained in politics, most especially in the U.S. Senate.
Environmental alliance has big hitters and big bucks
By A. James Memmott | October 14, 2007 at 7:46am | 0
It’s the sort of windfall that not-for-profits don’t receive every day.
A little more than a year old, the Alliance for Climate Protection gained $750,000 when former Vice President Al Gore was named co-recipient of this year’s Nobel Peace Prize Friday.
Gore announced that he would give his share of the prize to the alliance, a Palo Alto, Calif., organization he formed last year.
The group’s goal is to increase awareness about threats to the environment from global warming.
It helped put on this July’s Live Earth concerts in seven cities around the world.
