Word: advisors
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...from Dean Thompson's own memo of March 27, 1998, concerning "The Tenure Appointment Process in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences," that regardless of individual character faculty associate deans routinely recuse themselves from matters touching on tenure review in their home departments. A letter to me and my advisor, Professor Charles Nesson of Harvard Law School, of Oct. 21, 1998, from Professor Roderick MacFarquhar, chair of the Department of Government, explains that in the composition of the ad hoc committee, "The Dean has the final word, presumably to ensure that no Department can pack the committee to ensure success...
...glad I took Peter's case as his advisor. I feel I have done this at considerable risk to myself because I open myself up to grave criticisms by my colleagues, by students, or whoever wants to criticize...
Doing something like this may well be the least worst thing", said Francis M. Bator, Littauer professor of political economy emeritus at the KSG and a deputy national security advisor to former President Johnson...
...Freshman advisors--at least my freshman advisor--sent out things like, 'Be careful where you walk and walk with friends,'" she said...
Tellingly, the most consistently exciting character in the film is not Elizabeth herself but her shadowy advisor Sir Francis Walsingham, played with relish and cold blood by the virtuosic Geoffrey Rush. Other politicos surrounding the Queen, like unrecognizable Christopher Eccleston as the traitorous Duke of Norfolk and Santa Claus-lookalike Richard Attenborough as earnest advisor Sir William Cecil, reveal their allegiances too broadly to become truly fearful or fascinating. By contrast, Rush's lurking performance leaves everything to the imagination: Walsingham whispers sweet Machiavellian nothings in the ear of the Queen between sessions slitting the throats of the boys...