I sat in a large office, in a nice blue cushioned chair in front of the dean. |
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What is particularly galling is that the authors never bothered to contact me or my department head or dean to inquire about this matter. |
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The famous cathedral's dean directly oversees an organization of more than 70 people, including clergy, program staff and administrators. |
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Samuel Crossman was a priest in Bristol, and at his death dean of that city's cathedral. |
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Electronic key cards must be authorized by the cognizant dean, director, and department head. |
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The goal of the gender-blind hall, says the dean of student services, is to create a more comfortable environment for transgendered students. |
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She came to The University of Chicago from Wellesley College to become the dean of women. |
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First there was a general interview at which the candidates were grilled by the master, dean, senior tutor, and fellows of the subject. |
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Li is a surgeon and a former dean of the faculty of medicine at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. |
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Thereafter, I was kept busy as a teacher, departmental administrator, faculty dean, researcher and author of historical books and articles. |
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He is also an associate dean of the Medical University of South Carolina College of Medicine. |
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An economics graduate with a master's in political economy, he resigned as a faculty dean at the University of Malaya to enter politics. |
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He was formerly assistant dean of students and director of residence life at Delaware Valley College. |
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In 1988 he was appointed dean of the faculty of physics and technology at the St. Petersburg Technical University. |
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They will hear the case, then make a recommendation to the dean of students, who will make a decision. |
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In 1917, he was appointed dean of the college of letters at Beijing University. |
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You need to understand what are important to all the different groups in order to be an effective associate dean, let alone dean ad interim. |
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Gordon Nelson, former dean of the faculty of environmental studies, is one of the principal founders of this initiative. |
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Bill Michael is the university's assistant vice president for student life and associate dean of the college. |
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The college dean subsequently emailed students expressing his great alarm at their dangerous actions. |
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But if you want to be an academic leader, a dean, a president, a provost, it's very important to win your spurs as a respected faculty member. |
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Years later, Wilkins finds herself at a two-year college, not as a student, but as a dean at Georgia Perimeter College in Atlanta. |
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A few weeks later the postgraduate dean approved me for the flexible careers scheme. |
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The data on teacher referrals of students to the dean of students' office showed some interesting patterns. |
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The mistake was multiplied in perpetuum when he mistakenly sent a romantic message to his law school’s dean. |
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Published last year, this 172-page book carries an approving blurb from the dean of the Kellogg School of Management. |
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He will work with the dean and chapter to develop the Minster's resources and help to increase its funding revenue. |
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But after private talks, it was announced the dean would leave Ripon Cathedral by the end of the year. |
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For the first half of the last century, John Dewey was dean of American educators. |
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However, the dean has been on sabbatical leave since resigning and will officially depart at the end of the year. |
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From 1988 to 1997 he was vicar of St Mary's, Eastbourne, and rural dean of Eastbourne. |
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Despite uncertain health, he was installed as dean of St Paul's cathedral, where he was conscientious in his duties and subsequently buried. |
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She went on to work in university positions, eventually becoming the first dean of women students at the University of California, Berkeley. |
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The dean thereupon charged the professor with insubordination and persuaded the central administration to initiate dismissal proceedings. |
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Some of the little children he knew and loved best at Oxford were the daughters of Henry Liddell, the dean of Christ Church. |
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Now the dean and chapter of the cathedral has withdrawn its backing, after strong objections by residents. |
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The pass-fail option requires the signature of the student's advisor and dean. |
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One of the duties of the dean of Christ Church is to preach the annual Christmas sermon. |
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With a mutually acceptable resolution apparently not in sight, the dean wrote to the professor. |
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The statutes governing most English cathedrals give the dean and chapter together a considerable degree of independence from episcopal control. |
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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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Sometimes, trainees know they can go to the dean of the graduate school or to a university ombudsperson for such help. |
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An informal resolution session was held between the student, the ombudsperson, the course director, and the associate dean for student affairs. |
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The plans are being led by the church's vicar, Canon Derek Jackson, a former dean of Bradford Cathedral. |
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When Jane Hedges, a rural dean in Devon, arrives at Westminster in January she will break a male-only tradition stretching back 1,000 years. |
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I shook hands with the dean, swore the Hippocratic oath, signed up with the Medical Defence Union, and went to a party. |
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Approaching my last year and a half, I was given bad dates to register until I finally got really fed up and complained to the dean. |
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Elizabeth Peet, dean of women at Gallaudet College, was more colorful in her criticism of oralism's impact on Sign Language. |
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She is being made an honorary canon in recognition of her hospital work and will take over as rural dean of South Craven in February. |
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Joining us from New York, the dean of American broadcast journalists, Walter Cronkite. |
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As their numbers increased, they started living in areligious society headed by a dean. |
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On 1902, a shoeless boy from the Great Smoky Mountains stood before the dean at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. |
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The council said prosecuting people is a last resort but all dog owners must realise that it is their legal as well as their moral duty to dean up after their dog. |
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The school's culinary dean recalls being hung from a meat hook for improperly boning veal during one of his 14-hour days as an apprentice in 1949 Germany. |
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As dean of Aberdeen University's arts and divinity faculty, Torrance is seen as an intellectual, a heavyweight theologian and the strongest competition. |
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Worse, a dean told me that our department had outlived its purpose. |
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The dean told him face to face that Africans lacked the innate skills necessary to become a barrister. |
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The teenager was asked about conversations he had with the dean at Los Angeles' John Burroughs Middle School, where the boy had a history of acting up in class. |
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As apostolic nuncio, he automatically became dean of the diplomatic corps. |
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Former NATO commander James Stavridis, now dean of the fletcher School, takes much the same view. |
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Until this year, glen Johnson was the dean of Massachusetts political reporters. |
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Mark Levine, associate dean of students at GW, says this is the most effective way to cut down on student drinking. |
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Even John Adams, the transatlantic dean of minimalism, is at heart a maximalist, if the hectic massiness of his own essay in metaphysical erotics, Harmonium, is a guide. |
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See, where we went to med school, the dean was very strict about scrubs. |
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That was issued jointly by Mr Morley and the cathedral Dean and Chapter, the body which, headed by the beleaguered dean, runs the minster and employs the organist. |
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On the following Monday, it was arranged by my resident Adviser that I would meet with the dean of students, Robert Canevari. |
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Use a heavy-duty detergent or wax remover to dean this strip. |
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Exeter's was built in 1286 by the cathedral dean as an act of amends for his alleged involvement in the murder of his deputy, the cathedral precentor three years earlier. |
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If, however, a required course in a program is not offered in the same language as the program, the dean may waive this restriction. |
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The rural dean is appointed by the bishop to act as a channel of communication between himself and the clergy of the parishes which make up his deanery. |
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From 1984 to 1986, she was also part time dean of the medical faculty. |
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Gordon was also a major figure in university life, serving two terms as dean of the medical faculty, one term as vice principal, and on many committees. |
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He is the dean of Princeton University's School of Engineering and Applied Science and holds a professorship in the Department of Computer Science. |
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His sister's married to the son of a head dean at Oxford University. |
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In addition, a new policy required that all fraternity parties be registered with the dean of student's office and the campus police, who provide on-site security. |
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The new dean Pelhøim Novák lived also in the house No. 1235 till the deanship was completed. |
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In 1813 the dean Franti¨ek Kouba had the deanship whitewashed and the roof tiled. |
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The Reverand, Harold L. Lundquist, dean of the… A lady in the upper seventies got into a pretty mixup the other day. |
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In fact, the dean or chair must match up to fifty percent of the institutional support provided to the faculty. |
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Rob Beyer, the dean of students at Rosslyn, described her as good-humored and adventurous. |
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Clement Green berg, dean of modernist critics, gave Mr de Kooning his blessing. |
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Usually, a departmental committee of peers will review the dossier, after which the dean will adjudicate the file. |
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Please have application signed by the dean of medicine or registrar of the program. |
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One of the five officials who resigned at the cathedral after clashing with the dean was Robert Lambie, clerk of the chapter, the body that runs the ancient minster. |
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An official announcement by the dean and chapter, the ancient minster's governing body, is expected later in the week after a behind-closed-doors meeting today. |
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It may result in the putting on trial of the dean in the church courts on a charge of conduct unbecoming a clerk in holy orders, and an announcement is expected within weeks. |
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He always said that he was a priest first and a dean second. |
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The mother of two was installed as the new dean of historic Salisbury Cathedral in Wiltshire at a ceremony attended by members of the Church of England hierarchy. |
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The rural dean also attempted to visit Mrs Kendall but his car broke down. |
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According to the paper, Geoffrey Garrett, vice provost and dean of the UCLA International Institute, was the front-runner until his credentials were questioned: he had been head of a committee charged with vetting candidates. |
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At a reception in honor of Professor Blake and his new bride, the dean asphyxiates while offering a toast to the couple. |
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Entomologist Dr. Murray Isman, the new pro tem dean of the University of B. C. Faculty of Land and Food Systems, is studying the use of rosemary oil to control spider mites on greenhouse tomatoes. |
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Or maybe it was just that the undergraduate popinjay who talked back to the dean had got old and established, and become rather deanlike, himself. |
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In 1508, von Staupitz, first dean of the newly founded University of Wittenberg, sent for Luther, to teach theology. |
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The great church, the residences of the dean and the two prebendaries, the choir and its appurtenances, were all intact and in working order. |
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But when the time came a year later to be ordained as a priest, Dodgson appealed to the dean for permission not to proceed. |
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The dean seemed to glow with the recollection. |
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A dean is a priest who is the principal cleric of a cathedral or other collegiate church and the head of the chapter of canons. |
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Archbishop Prendergast holds a BA from Fordham University, New York, a master's degree as well as a licentiate in theology, and also a doctorate in Scripture, from Regis College, Toronto, where he taught and was also dean. |
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Raghunathan, who is a former bursar and Vijay Thanka, the dean of academics, for the post of the bursar. |
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Raghunathan, former bursar of the college, and Dr Vijay Thanka, dean of academics. |
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Since 1996 Bishop Pei has been active as professor of exegesis and biblical theology at the regional seminary in Shenyang and as its vice-rector and student dean. |
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A few years after the Cuban crisis the dean of Canadian historians, the irascible Donald Creighton, lauded the government for its reluctance to respond to the American lead. |
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He is former dean of the faculty of arts and humanities, professor of literature, and director of the centre for creative and performing arts at the University of East Anglia. |
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Tomorrow, the dean of Canterbury and I share a platform. |
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The canon, chaplain and dean of St Paul's have all resigned. |
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The Church Commissioners pay the salary of the dean and two of the residentiary canons only. |
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Mr. Prichard is President Emeritus of the University of Toronto where he served as President from 1990-2000 and previously served as dean of law and as a professor specializing in law and economics. |
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If the cathedral or collegiate church has its own parish, the dean is usually also rector of the parish. |
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And, on 30 November 2002, he was elected dean, taking, as is customary, the title of Cardinal Bishop of the Suburbicarian Diocese of Ostia. |
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There is also, usually in the nave, a raised pulpit from which the dean or other clergy can expound the scriptures. |
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The dean of King's College is an ordained person, which is unusual among British universities. |
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Firstly, there are those that, during the Medieval period as now, were governed by a body of secular clergy or chapter, presided over by a dean. |
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And as dean, with the help of his deaness, Eva Howe Stevens, he entertained every student in his home every year and made Cornell a Shangri-la. |
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Bryan Trippet has been named dean of instruction at Estrella Mountain Community College, in Avondale, Ariz. |
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Gyoshev is an associate professor of management and deputy dean for research of the school for education at Shumen University in Bulgaria. |
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Their larger-than-life dean, the court poet Adrian Paunescu, had been nearly lynched by a furious mob who remembered his bootlicking verses. |
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She filled the chair of chemistry and toxology in the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, and became dean of the faculty. |
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Donne was, in fact, a rake and a bawd before he became a preacher and, in the fullness of time, the dean of St. Pauls Cathedral, famous for his sermons and celebrated at court. |
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In July 1601 he was appointed dean of Westminster and gave much attention to the school there. |
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The need for quality after school programs in Canada is growing, says Faye Mishna, dean and professor, Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto. |
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Bloom was previously a Mycobacterium immunologist at the Albert Einstein School of Medicine and is now dean of the Harvard School of Public Health. |
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Whenever the dean and chapter confirm any act, that such confirmation may be valid, the dean must join in person, and not in the person of a deputy or subdean only. |
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The cathedral is governed by the chapter which is chaired by the dean. |
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Gadjah Mada University's anthropology school dean, Heddy Shri Ahimsa Putra, has opined that rural tourism could become a big draw for Yogyakarta, a region of Java. |
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During his period as dean his daughter Lucy died, aged eighteen. |
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In order to add jollity to the proceedings, said the dean, each graduand would find beneath his seat a little tub of bubbles, complete with mortar board cap. |
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Decanal side, the side of the choir on which the dean's stall is placed. Decanal stall, the stall allotted to the dean in the choir, on the right or south side of the chancel. |
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Ipswich's Adam Smith, the dean of Massachusetts sea duck hunting guides from the Perfect Limit, shared his thoughts on the current season yesterday. |
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