Word: consultant
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...indicated, the problems they have to deal with are as varied as the students are in number. They may have to consult with a senior tutor about whether to let a student take his meals outside the House or to let him live out. They may talk to a student who has taken a medical leave of absence in order to undertake intensive therapy. They may be trapped on the telephone, trying to talk to a reporter as well, leafing through their calendars trying to find a student whose appointment they can cancel so that they can make room...
Tierney stated that he would not consult the University's files to locate the owner of an out-of-state car, but would merely have it towed away. However, he praised the University's newly broadened program of keeping a file of the locations where students park their cars...
...degree in History and Literature seems to have missed page 256, note 7, of the current "Courses of Instruction Offered by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences." The note says explicitly that the prerequisite (in the instance French 20) applies only to concentrators in the Department. Other students consult the instructor to determine whether they should risk the course they want to elect. W. M. Frohock, Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures...
...fever, he asked the Duke of Gloucester: "Sir, what did I talk about?" His Royal Highness replied: "My dear boy, I don't know, but it was damned good." After Menzies took office in 1939, a brash reporter asked: "I suppose you'll consult the powerful interests who control you before you choose your Cabinet?" Said Menzies: "Naturally. But, young man, please keep my wife's name out of this." During weighty Commonwealth talks in London in 1952 on how to shore up the pound sterling, he scrawled on his doodle...
...fortnight ago, as yet another gesture, Radio Warsaw announced that the Central Committee had decided to readmit Gomulka to party membership. This time there was no denunciation of Gomulka's opinions. Instead the broadcast emphasized that "representatives of the Politburo met with Comrade Gomulka" to consult him on "fundamental problems." The Politburo's purpose seemed clear. Gomulka's nationalism had won him the admiration of many Poles, including some antiCommunists, and by re-garbing him in the raiment of Marxist grace, the party hoped to win favor with people who say that if they must be governed...