Word: counsels
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...echo Martin Smyth, Imperial Grand Master of the Orange Institution, who pledged his allegiance to the Crown. "The Monarchy stands for the highest and best of our Constitutional procedures," Smyth said. "All things are done in the name of Her Majesty whether it is a result of foolish counsel by her ministers...
...role, Arthurs visualizes herself as a sort of "liaison between the departments and University Hall," who'll be working with groups ranging from the Office of Career Services and the Bureau of Study Counsel--never before linked to the University administration--to Room 13 and the Committee on Undergraduate Education. She will also sit for the first time on the Committee on Houses and Undergraduate Life, where she will wrestle with the current housing crisis precipitated by the increasing unpopularity of the Quadrangle. "I think it would be nice to make a decision," she says, without committing herself...
...relations, and he reported to Harvard's director of personnel, who, in turn, was (and still is) answerable to the vice president for administration. As a director, however, Powers is on the same level as John B. Butler, the personnel chief, and reports directly to the University's general counsel, Daniel Steiner '54. The increasingly legalistic nature of labor relations at Harvard forced this change in the administrative structure. The University, or perhaps more precisely Steiner, felt that the labor post had become a job for a lawyer, which Powers is, and which Mullins...
...Callahan, James B. Adams and Eugene W. Walsh. The continuing FBI investigation is especially sensitive because these men now hold three of the bureau's five top jobs. Many agents, in fact, believe that the trio actually runs the FBI−with a little behind-the-scenes counsel from Mohr...
...question to Richard Nixon was direct: Did he think that the public had a right to know the full story of Watergate? Before the former President could reply, his own attorney interjected: "What do you mean by Watergate? The building?" Asked again, Nixon shrugged off the question: "If my counsel doesn't know, I would never put my wisdom above...