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Word: hiring (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

Vacha said the University "would have to hire more student drivers, which might cause some scheduling difficulties...

Author: By Joseph L. Contreras, | Title: CHUL Will Study Expanded Shuttle to Quad | 2/19/1976 | See Source »

George E. Vaillant, associate professor of Psychiatry, whose class, Social Sciences 169, "Adaptations to Life," drew 300 students, said yesterday he will be forced to hire two more teaching assistants and to move to another lecture hall...

Author: By Mark D. Stegall, | Title: Professors Blame Crowding On Limited Course Options | 2/14/1976 | See Source »

...behalf of a candidate. The court held that such a limitation "impermissibly burdens the constitutional right of free expression." Thus as long as a candidate did not authorize or know about such spending, an individual could put up a billboard, take out a newspaper ad, buy TV time, hire doorbell ringers or mail out leaflets to help. Considering the history of politicians and politics in the U.S., the ruling seems extremely naive-leaving a mile-wide loophole for the return of the "fat cat" to the campaign scene...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE SUPREME COURT: The Money Game: Changing the Rules | 2/9/1976 | See Source »

Della Terza says he has devoted countless hours to demonstrating that his decision not to hire Napoli was based on merit alone, and he is pained by her suggestions to the contrary. "I see that you are involving me rather directly in your strongly polemical approach to the problem of your candidacy," he wrote to her in 1973. When she was his student, he went on to remind her, she "protested vehemently and dramatically" when he told her that only "long and patient training" could overcome her linguistic difficulties. He dismissed her claim that the department changed its offerings...

Author: By Marc Witkin, | Title: Investigating Harvard | 1/30/1976 | See Source »

...does, she and the University will be given a chance to make a voluntary settlement. Steiner will not speculate what sort of an agreement they might reach. Napoli's husband wrote the Commission that Harvard could redress his wife's grievance by revoking the contested appointment and hiring Napoli, or by creating another assistant professorship for her, or by awarding her compensation for the difference between her earnings and the salary she would have made in the five-year Harvard appointment. Napoli now says she doubts she would want a post. "It would be awful to teach in the Italian...

Author: By Marc Witkin, | Title: Investigating Harvard | 1/30/1976 | See Source »

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