Word: counseled
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...words suggest the two limits of privacy: alone and loneliness. As a functioning individual, man demands moments when he can be alone. But he does not want to be lonely. He withdraws in order to consider his counsel. But then he wishes his counsel to be asked. If it is not asked, he is lonely. And paradoxically, at the moment that privacy is most assaulted in the U.S., Americans seem to fear loneliness more than they fear the loss of privacy...
...enforce standards through its code of ethics. And that code says that no pathologist shall practice in any lab where the boss is not a pathologist; others might not live up to the college's code. The Government, said Oliver Neibel, executive director of and general counsel to the college, has taken the first step in its campaign of "harassment of the entire medical profession." The suit was filed, he said, to put pressure on doctors already overburdened by Medicare...
...well on its way to enactment-he will have the satisfaction of leaving a hand-picked successor in his place: William S. Gaud Jr., 58, who has been AID'S deputy administrator since 1964. A Yale-educated lawyer, Gaud (pronounced Gowd) began his public service as assistant corporation counsel for New York City under Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, who thought Gaud was qualified to become mayor himself some day. An army colonel in charge of lend-lease operations for the China-Burma-India theater during World War II, Gaud put in a brief postwar stint as special assistant...
...confidence of my Democratic and Republican colleagues and is especially close to our leaders"), but preserved copies of the correspondence because he saw nothing "sinister" about it. Klein's troubles persisted, and Dodd sent Westrick a second ghosted letter describing Klein as an "adviser and counsel" cherished not only by Congressional Democrats and Republicans but also by the Administration...
...loving father had been found at last. Boswell fell at the great man's feet to confess what a bad boy he had been and to beseech counsel. Johnson gave it without stint, and when Boswell sailed for the continent a few weeks later he made a two-day journey to Harwich to put him on board and to comfort a frightened young man he had known little more than two months...