Feb 4, 2011

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MRC Lincoln Reagan Dinner with Rudy Giuliani – March 18

MRC Lincoln Reagan Dinner with Rudy Giuliani – March 18

Online Ticket Sales are now closed. Please call 603-540-5028 with questions.

Please join us for the MRC’s Annual Lincoln Reagan Dinner featuring special guest Rudy Giuliani


WHEN:
Friday March 18th, 2011

VIP Reception 6:00pm-6:30pm
General Reception / Dinner 6:30pm

WHERE:
The Executive Court
1099 Mammoth Rd.
Manchester, NH

TICKETS:
General Admission / Dinner – $50pp
VIP Reception, Includes Photo & Dinner – $100pp

Table sponsorships (10 general admission tickets) are available.

Important:

  • No paper tickets will be mailed. Your name(s) will be on a list at the door.
  • Please print your RECEIPT for your records. Paypal will provide a confirmation of your purchase.
  • If you DO NOT get a confirmation, chances are that your transaction was not processed correctly.
  • We are required to collect your address, and in some cases, your employer and occupation for election law reporting purposes.

 

To RSVP and pay via check, please email info@manchestergop.com

Checks can be mailed in advance of the event to:

Manchester GOP
PO BOX 3575
Manchester, NH 03105

All proceeds from this event will go towards the Manchester Republican Committee’s City Election Campaign Fund, which will help us elect Republicans to city offices across the Queen City.


RUDY GIULIANI

Rudolph Giuliani was born in Brooklyn in 1943, attended Manhattan College (B.A., 1965) in the Bronx, and New York University law school in Manhattan.  After graduating magna cum laude in 1968, Giuliani clerked for Judge Lloyd MacMahon of the United States District Court, then joined the office of the U.S. Attorney.  At age 29, he was named Chief of the Narcotics Unit and rose to serve as executive US Attorney.  In 1975, Giuliani was named Associate Deputy Attorney General and chief of staff to the Deputy Attorney General at the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington, D.C.  In 1977, Giuliani returned to New York to practice law.

In 1981, President Ronald Reagan appointed Giuliani Associate Attorney General, the third highest position in the Department of Justice.  As Associate Attorney General, Giuliani supervised all of the US Attorney Offices’ Federal law enforcement agencies, the Bureau of Corrections, the Drug Enforcement Agency, and the US Marshals.

In 1983, Giuliani was appointed US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, where he led the effort to jail drug dealers, fight organized crime, break the web of corruption in government, and prosecute white-collar criminals.

In 1989, Giuliani ran for mayor of New York City, losing by the closest margin in City history.  Four years later, he was elected the 107th Mayor of the City of New York.

In office, Giuliani pursued an ambitious agenda.  He transformed policing in the city and spearheaded dramatic reductions in the crime rate, making New York the safest large city in America by a wide margin.  He attacked quality of life issues that had gone ignored for years.  He cut taxes by billions of dollars and improved the city’s business climate, leading New York out of a devastating recession.  He revolutionized the city’s welfare system, placing the emphasis on work rather than benefits, and cutting the rolls by more than two-thirds.  And he pressed for change in the education system, advocating charter schools, vouchers, and reform of the cumbersome bureaucracy.

Giuliani’s innovative and energetic approach to urban governance – in issues ranging from policing to privatization – has been studied and emulated by cities around the country, and around the world.  In 1997, Giuliani was re-elected mayor of New York by nearly 60% of the vote, carrying four of the five boroughs.

On September 11, 2001 Rudy Giuliani rallied the city and the nation in response to the worst attack on American soil since Pearl Harbor.  With less than three months left in his term as Mayor, Giuliani marshaled all the resources at his command toward rescuing victims, maintaining order, and comforting the survivors.  His leadership in that hour has been hailed by world figures from George Bush to Tony Blair to Junichiro Koizumi.  Giuliani was Time magazine’s Person of the Year for 2001, and he received an honorary knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II of England in 2002.

Limited by New York City law to two terms as mayor, Rudy Giuliani founded Giuliani Partners in January, 2002, quickly establishing the professional services firm as a leader in emergency preparedness, public safety, leadership during crises, and financial management.  Drawing on his experience in turning a city described as ungovernable into a city that is now a worldwide example of good government and effective management, Giuliani was recognized in Spring 2002 as “Consultant of the Year” by Consulting magazine. Mayor Giuliani is also a Partner in the law firm of Bracewell & Giuliani LLP.  Bracewell & Giuliani is a major international law firm with over 400 lawyers, serving mainly clients in the energy and financial service industries.

In May of 2003, Mr. Giuliani married Judith S. Nathan, who was at the time a Managing Director of Changing Our World, Inc., a national fundraising and philanthropic services company headquartered in New York.  Prior to joining Changing Our World, Mrs. Giuliani, a registered nurse with an extensive medical and scientific background, worked with U. S. Surgical Corporation and Bristol-Myers Squibb. In the aftermath of September 11, 2001, Mrs. Giuliani helped coordinate the efforts of the Family Assistance Center at Pier 94. Judith was a Founding Member of the Board of Trustees of the Twin Towers Fund, which raised and distributed $216,000,000 to over 600 recipients. Mrs. Giuliani also served as the Executive Director of the Campaign for Saint Vincent Catholic Medical Centers in New York, which, focuses on emergency preparedness in the City of New York.

Mayor Giuliani recently ran for the Republican nomination for President of the United States.  During his campaign, he galvanized the national debate on such critical issues as national security, education, energy independence, healthcare, and the economy.  The policy commitments Mayor Giuliani made to the American people remain vitally important to America’s future.