Word: counseling
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...element of imprecision, and not necessarily an undesirable one, is that the psychiatric service is but one of several places of resort of for the student in search of counsel. The skeptics say that the existence of the Bureau of Study Counsel, The Office of Student Placement, the Board of Freshman advisers, plus assorted Deans, ministers, departmental tutors, and so forth provides the possibility (which has become a reality in a few instances) that a student may see them...
Defenders of the ad hoc system point out that a student may not see his problem as one needing a psychiatrist's help in unravelling and may instead go to the Bureau of Study Counsel. The Bureau, they point out, has a consultant who can give moral support in any borderline cases. It is better, the defenders say, to let a student go on talking to a man he trusts than to lose him altogether...
...helpless to combat it, the Russians permitted burly Nina to go to court to answer the charge of stealing five cheap hats from London's C. & A. Modes, Ltd. (TIME, Sept. 10). "I hope you won't put it against her," the shoplifting athlete's British counsel, Mervyn Griffith-Jones, told the court, "that she failed to surrender earlier." During the four hours of testimony that followed, Nina, wearing the same fawn-colored gabardine in which she was arrested, stoutly insisted that she had paid for the hats, although she could not remember getting a receipt...
...calculated that she would pass to port within half a mile to a mile of Stockholm. He did not see Andrea Doria's lights until she was less than two miles away. (At once the counsel for the Italian Line pounced: "What do you think obscured the lights?" Replied Carstens-Johannsen: "That's what I'm also wondering," and then he conceded that Andrea Doria might have been obscured by "patches of fog.") In any case, mindful of the captain's order not to pass within a mile of another ship, he ordered a sharp turn...
...Gotcha. His ground well prepared in advance, Subcommittee Counsel William E. Gerber of Memphis, a tough-looking, cigar-chewing product of the Crump machine, started digging for the kind of pay dirt that makes headlines. Presenting President C. Melvin Sharpe of the District board of education with a stack of papers and statistics he had not had a chance to read, Gerber started firing leading questions (and got his witness so befuddled that he once stated he agreed with Gerber's "testimony"), finally pried out an admission that "present events indicate if we had been more moderate we would...