Word: interview
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...most daring part of Margaret's book is that, instead of a small town in the Bible Belt, she sets it in the most liberal area in the country, an Eastern campus," he said in an interview...
...have identified a job in which I am interested, and have begun a rather lengthy interview process," she said...
...Frankly, I was frustrated because I didn't have an opportunity to interview students more directly," Kelling says...
...another interview, George White, the president of the HUPD officers' union, said, "You don't want to hear what I'd have to say" about the changes. He declined further comment, citing ongoing contract negotiations...
Conceding its own limitations, the Ad Board relies on the reports of disciplinary subcommittees in complicated cases. But whereas the Ad Board can conceivably distinguish itself from a court of law if it does not engage in fact-finding, a disciplinary subcommittee cannot. Subcommittees, like courts of law, interview the accused and accuser, examine witnesses and summarize their findings in a written report. No matter how hard the administration attempts to avoid using the language of the law, it is ultimately a semantic distortion to refer to such investigative disciplinary subcommittees--implicitly extensions of the Ad Board--as "educational" bodies...