Prior to his chancellorship, he worked at the school for 10 years as dean, a job his professional and academic credentials helped him snag. |
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Despite the criticisms voiced here and elsewhere, there is little doubt that his chancellorship so far has on balance been remarkably successful. |
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Other possible allies include the Netherlands, and possibly Germany, if the centre-right Angela Merkel wins the chancellorship in a general election this autumn. |
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And that in turn implies a general disarray in the Brown chancellorship. |
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The chancellorship of the duchy of Lancaster has been used in recent centuries as a supernumerary post, often in the cabinet, for an elder statesman. |
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Not long after that, Lloyd was elevated to the chancellorship by Harold Macmillan. |
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By the late 1700s, the lord keeper's role was merged into the chancellorship itself. |
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Minister presidents are highly visible national figures and often progress to federal office, either the chancellorship or a position in the federal cabinet. |
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In May 1532, Sir Thomas More resigned the chancellorship and, in June, Fisher preached publicly against the divorce. |
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My dissatisfaction with the chancellorship of George Osborne has not diminished with time, but even I should find it a little extreme to suggest that he fall on his sword. |
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After three postwar decades when cheap oil was taken for granted, the oil-importing nations were hit for six by the 1973-74 oil shock, and Healey's chancellorship was beleaguered by a quintupling of the price of oil. |
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In an attempt to heal the still raw wounds inside the party, the new leader surprisingly handed the shadow chancellorship to the experienced Alan Johnson, the first supporter of David Miliband's leadership campaign. |
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Macleod, whom I met many years ago, is best known for the brevity of his chancellorship, which lasted only a few weeks in 1970 before he was struck down by the grim reaper. |
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On 19 August, the merger of the presidency with the chancellorship was approved by 90 percent of the electorate in a plebiscite. |
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Mr. Bloomberg will also contend that the chancellorship is unlike any other superintendency because of its size, and that Ms. Black's business sensibilities will be useful in managing a system of 130,000 employees. |
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Soon, however, the expensive dreadnought race provoked a fiscal crisis that cracked the Bülow bloc and, in 1909, elevated Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg to the chancellorship. |
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A rift grew between Henry and Becket as the new archbishop resigned his chancellorship and sought to recover and extend the rights of the archbishopric. |
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If he can help John take the throne, his prize will be the Chancellorship. |
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In March 1917 he was informally offered the Lord Chancellorship, with the highest salary in government, but he declined. |
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Formerly, in cases when the Chancellorship was vacant, the Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench would act as Chancellor pro tempore. |
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In 1925 he stood for the Chancellorship of Oxford University, vacant on the death of Lord Curzon. |
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