Word: hire
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...only way to fill the curricular gap in teacher training, of course, is to hire more faculty. Sizer could throw out established or incipient research projects to raise the funds and hire faculty but he refuses. "There have been very few schools," says Sizer, "that have been able to stay with basic inquiry. The one's that don't, become trade schools. We can't keep putting band-aids on urban schools. We've got to have some long-range solutions." To get at the problem of training teachers Sizer has applied for a federal grant to fund two clinical...
...Perhaps it would be beneficial for the college campus activity in the 1980s to have the international flavor of the 13th century rendition of its counterpart, along with the organized student guilds also found during that period [Sept. 13]. Once again, students could fire and hire faculty, plan course content, overrule the administration, and with rapidity move their centers of learning to meet their needs...
...Albert DeSalvo, the self-proclaimed Boston Strangler, has replaced Bailey with a lawyer who was admitted to the Massachusetts bar less than a year ago. Shrugs the Great Defender: "If somebody else wants to take a crack at it, good luck to him, but Albert can't 'hire' anybody because he's bankrupt...
Considerable Power. The sounds were tough-but the reality was the opposite. The FCC is strapped not only for limousines but for the funds to hire an adequate staff. It is smothered in routine business and has little time for policing the industry-even if it wanted to. Moreover, the commission is subject to pressure from the President, who appoints its members, and from Congress, which appropriates its budget. Both the Administration and the Congressmen have many friends in the broadcasting business. Some members of Congress are in it themselves...
...five-year-old son Cory, played by a winning little fellow named Marc Copage. They are pretty well off, judging from the nifty apartment they occupy. Still, Julia needs a job. She is turned away by America's only personnel director who is not desperate to hire Negroes. Fortunately, she finds a protector in cantankerous Dr. Chegley (Lloyd Nolan), who doesn't care what color she is as long as she knows her business. Some of Julia's problems are black, but her aspirations and life-style are white. That factor, despite NBC's laudable decision...