Word: counselors
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...reasons is a cadre of dedicated white teachers whose careers go back to the 1920s-old hands such as Biology Teacher Rebekah Leibengood, English Teacher Virginia Oldham and Coach Harry Slaymaker. Instead of deserting, they stayed on to join several gifted Negro teachers in saving Central. Explains veteran Guidance Counselor Hortense Schaller: "We've fought against letting our expectations drop. We are not willing to accept the idea that because a child comes from a less favorable environment he can't make it. We have not given in one iota...
...most intelligent, hardworking people in the world-and far better able to help the Commonwealth and supply capital and know-how to underdeveloped countries." On the other hand, if Britain stayed out, Birch warned, it would not long retain what Britons like to regard as their first-friend-and-counselor role with the U.S. "As the relative power of the Six and ourselves changes, so will our special position with the U.S. tend to decline...
This cloak-and-daggering is necessary because Peddie's committed "can't get high school guidance counselors to stick their neck out." Minnesota is state university territory, and in the close-knit communities, Peddie claims, "a counselor can't afford to stick his neck out. . . . He can't favor us over a state university, or favor one Ivy college over another. The ones who will stick their necks out for us are the old gals, who don't want to be superintendents. Young guys have to watch...
...Brien, 35, is a former insurance broker with a wife and six children; George C. Randol, 30, was a copy editor on the San Francisco Chronicle; the other four are 26-year-olds-ex-Paratrooper Thomas R. Keene, Graduate Student (in philosophy) Roger E. Armstrong. Youth Counselor Joseph E. Fresques, High School Teacher Thomas P. Grace. Each of them plans to work in two neighboring parishes, giving in each a series of 24 lectures four times a year, as well as following up on converts and getting to know the parishes and their people "on a country-doctor basis...
...appointed to find out just where the CIA went wrong in planning the Cuba invasion, and to recommend changes in the nation's intelligence system. When not digging among the Cuba-invasion ruins, Bobby Kennedy was at the White House, serving as the President's closest counselor. It was usually late in the afternoon before Bobby got to the Justice Department to carry out his tasks as Attorney General. Deputy Attorney General Byron ("Whizzer") White was wearily trying to take as much routine work as possible off Bobby's shoulders, but there were many decisions that only...