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Etymologies
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Examples
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The Vice-Chancellor's report illustrated better than I could how all the activities of the University, and by implication Higher Education in general, is now becoming market-led, with academic considerations becoming secondary.
Market-led academia 2004
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- Their Majesties proceed to the Vice-Chancellor's office for
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- Their Majesties proceed to the Vice-Chancellor's office for
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I understand that this is the first in a series of Vice-Chancellor's lectures delivered under the auspices of Auckland University.
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Council also noted the good work of the Vice-Chancellor's Office in attempting to mediate between the parties, and the fact that the SRC has committed itself to a resolution of the dispute and has undertaken to do all in its power to guarantee the safety of Prof Mihalik on campus.
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Sentence of banishment was pronounced against him: which sentence was confirmed by the Court of Delegates, to which Mr. Frend had appealed from the Vice-Chancellor's Court.
The Life of Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1838 James Gillman
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Vice-Chancellor's own door, the Oxford Prelatists daily assemble to enjoy the forbidden Prayer-Book; and the youth who follows, building castles in the air, is Christopher Wren.
The International Monthly Magazine, Volume 5, No. 1, January, 1852 Various
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As early as 1844 the Vice-Chancellor's Court was the scene of the action of the Proprietors of _Punch_ _v.
The History of "Punch" M. H. Spielmann
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Vice-Chancellor's Court, in the year 1793, for sedition and defamation of the Church of England, in giving utterance to and printing certain opinions, founded on Unitarian Doctrines, adverse to the established
The Life of Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1838 James Gillman
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Vice-Chancellor's procession goes to give degrees.
Oxford Frederick Douglas How 1907
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