Word: counselors
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...While some may view this as a final chapter, the President views it very much more as a new chapter--one in which there is an enormous amount of time to get things done," presidential counselor Dan Bartlett says. "As you look back over history, divided government has often produced big results." White House officials say they have a plan, and told TIME how they hope to pull off their Houdini...
...higher rates have made it harder to sell college to some students, especially those from low-income families, said Robert Jones, a guidance counselor at Louisville's Central High School. "Every year, we have seniors that are always worried about how they can afford a college education," said Jones, who welcomed the changes at U of L. "It is becoming more and more expensive. ... There are a lot of students who feel they just can't afford it, and they are opting to go to two-year college first...
...your siblings, your parents, your grandparents,” he says. He and other candidates at this stage are given $50 for this trouble, “a trifling sum” according to James. Once this paperwork is completed, the real fun begins: a meeting with a genetic counselor, a physical examination with the company’s physician, and two samples, according the sperm bank’s web site. Unfortunately for James, things went sour—after this stage, he was rejected. “They don’t tell you why you?...
...spent on them and their siblings as a scorecard showing who is more loved. Yet in most families, total equality is impossible to achieve. What to do? Be realistic, experts say, and accept that the playing field may not be level. The message, says Jennifer Coleman, a life-transition counselor at Rosen Law Firm in Raleigh, N.C., should be that no matter who spends what on whom, all the children are valued equally...
...help Susan Emerling and her husband resolve an ongoing argument between his daughter and hers soon after the couple married. One of the girls had lots of friends over and complained that her stepsister kept horning in. The other said it wasn't fair to leave her out. The counselor suggested that they make a rule: Whoever had friends over had a right to privacy with them in her bedroom, but if they played in a common area, her stepsister had the right to join in. "This did fix it," Emerling relates. After the child who needed privacy...