Word: counterpart
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...come up with alternative plans for a new exhibit that will cost approximately $10 million. At the same time, a Soviet delegation dedicated the construction site of the $20 million Russian pavilion. In solitary splendor, it will soar 300 ft. high, just to the north of where its U.S. counterpart would have stood...
...teams that have operated in the remotest parts of Thailand since 1963 are happy to welcome the Air Commandos aboard. We've treated nearly 50,000 patients at sick call, dug 75 wells, constructed 25 schools, built 125 miles of road with some 30 bridges, and trained 15 counterpart Thai border-patrol police teams in civic action work...
...both Columbia and the Sorbonne, demonstrators demanded curriculums more consonant with the times, a larger role in university affairs, and the demolition of those invisible walls that convert a university into an academic hermitage. But more than an ocean and a language separate the French university student and his counterpart in the U.S. The two can hardly be measured on the same scale. French higher education, reports TIME Correspondent Judson Gooding, is an ordeal of body and spirit that has changed little over the centuries. It is still almost as harshly competitive an environment as it was in the 13th...
Should a small-town doctor be held to the same medical standards in a malpractice suit as his counterpart in the big city? Traditionally, the answer has been no, but with the new ease of communication, the so-called "locality" rule is changing. Massachusetts is the latest state to abandon the old standard. The ruling came in the case of a smalltown anesthesiologist accused of having given an excessive dose of a painkiller to a pregnant woman, thereby causing partial paralysis of her left leg. While noting that the lack of medical resources in a small town could be taken...
...work for the division brought him into frequent contact with Trottenberg as he and his counterpart for Chemistry Laboratories discussed plans for expansion. His work in Whitlock's office, Leahy said, was less concerned with "the nuts and bolts aspect of finding federal funding for projects" than solving particular problems for the University raised by changes in laws governing patents and publication...