Word: advisor
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Second-year students were granted four hours of substitution, but their class "chairman" (advisor) must agree that the courses will "further some special objective in their legal education." Acting Dean A. James Casner said yesterday that a second-year student concentrating in anti-trust law, for example, would be allowed to take courses in economics...
...Kennedy forces under the leadership of former Lieutenant Governor Phillip Sorensen, brother of Kennedy advisor Theodore Sorensen, gathered in Lincoln today to hold secret strategy meetings. In the selection of delegates to the national convention--which is, like New Hampshire, separate from the Presidential preference section on the primary ballot--the Kennedy forces are at a disadvantage. There are only two names on the ballot pledged to Kennedy out of the 28 delegates to be elected...
...year, a kind of group feeling or group coherence which grows up among the case workers in any given group. It comes from the discussions. Each group has a day leader--he's a student--and a [professional] supervisor. The frequency with which they meet with the professional person--advisor (I guess everyone's a professional person)-- varies very much from group to group. The kind of group that forms also varies with the frequency...
This is not necessarily true. Cases may be incurable--in fact I don't think we cure anybody, we get them well enough to manage in the world. Nevertheless, you struggle through that, and the group begins to need support from the advisor and the day leader. Up comes exams about this time or a few weeks later; there is an interruption, and unless the case-aides keep contact with their patients, you find that the patients do reject the case-aides...
Rivalries among case-aides are not overt rivalries. Nobody hates anybody in the groups. What does sometimes happen is that the roles of the day leader and the professional advisor have to be clarified between them. They have to work together so that the advisor doesn't feel usurped by the day leader and the day leader doesn't feel put down or put himself down to the supervisor. If not, the group will split and form loyalties. This is where professionalism comes in--here, and in answering questions like "What is the effect of electroshock?" or "What does this...