Even at this hour there were usually at least two secretaries at hand to take down the words in relays. |
|
Where the others chased secretaries around desks, he dated women with politesse. |
|
As the editors explain, Reagan composed in longhand, usually on yellow legal pads, then had secretaries type his work. |
|
The secretaries have been treated to an image consultant brought in at company expense to teach them how to tart themselves up. |
|
There are paintings and photographs of generals, lieutenants, sergeants, privates, secretaries and commanders-in-chief. |
|
Some secretaries have also been love interests, and some have just strengthened an already strong supporting cast. |
|
We don't have managers and assemblers, editors and secretaries, surgeons and nurses. |
|
Professional archivists from around the country will be running this library, not press secretaries. |
|
I know plenty of intellectual men who marry secretaries or women who just want to be homemakers. |
|
The two countries' high commissioners should immediately pick up the phone, and call each other, and their respective home secretaries. |
|
There are others who get their jollies by insulting switchboard operators, receptionists and secretaries. |
|
They looked, for the most part, to be models, airline stewardesses, executive secretaries, fashion buyers and boutique managers. |
|
He received 17,000 votes against 26,000 for one of the two sitting general secretaries, beating the other joint incumbent into third place. |
|
They are post office employees, factory workers, baggage handlers, nurses, secretaries, lab technicians, and teachers. |
|
He is creating advisory posts in the rank of cabinet minister and political secretaries in the rank of minister of state. |
|
Another achievement is the important role of women, who have become vicereines, first ministers, national directors, or secretaries. |
|
Cabinet secretaries are undoubtedly senior, and some reporters extend the title to their deputies and undersecretaries. |
|
We have a layer of stewards under the branch secretaries who also filter this democracy down. |
|
Parliamentary secretaries exist to sign letters, reply to debates at uncongenial hours, and read briefs approved by their elders if not betters. |
|
We had it written by one of the typists or secretaries in the office who didn't have any thoughts of becoming a writer. |
|
|
A double-glazed window bisects the room, which will separate MSPs from their secretaries. |
|
Church treasurers and financial secretaries should serve for limited terms, such as two or three years. |
|
They may be secretaries and trades unionists, and I'm sure they're all very good at their jobs, but they don't exactly send the pulse racing. |
|
To ask who should be there is not just a protocol question for the titivation of social secretaries. |
|
He regularly bedded secretaries and prostitutes provided by friendly governments. |
|
Additional staff is needed to run rural branch surgeries, which restricts partners' ability to employ secretaries and administrators. |
|
Short tenures of senior secretaries, Ms. Gouri lamented, has had its own effect in the functioning of her department. |
|
Younger women became clerks or office secretaries, while others worked as manicurists or hairdressers in beauty salons. |
|
But the only jobs they were hiring women for in the bank were tellers and secretaries. |
|
We have seen successive governments and home secretaries promise to be tough on crime. |
|
The government, made up of 16 ministers and seven secretaries of state was officially announced overnight in a presidential decree. |
|
It is estimated about 20 percent of the district's 1,300 custodians, cafeteria workers, secretaries and library workers took part in the sickout. |
|
Imagine my reaction then as I stumble out of the cupboard buttoning up the flies on my jeans and two secretaries are walking past. |
|
In the 1930s and 1940s, aside from copy typists and secretaries, the newsroom was a predominantly male domain. |
|
Although the proposal is expected to go through, some branch secretaries are known to be strongly opposed. |
|
Lang was impressed by the motivation of the young people in the mail room, the secretaries and the receptionist. |
|
The contract also reclassifies secretaries, library and teaching assistants in a higher pay grade. |
|
Over the last few weeks, the Bush administration has been busy filling seats left by eight departing cabinet secretaries. |
|
He was the prime minister of a supreme War Cabinet, backed up by a new Cabinet office and a kitchen cabinet of private secretaries. |
|
Unlucky for him, the working day of the secretaries was over for the weekend. |
|
|
In the study area, most of the organizational secretaries are from local non-Sukuma ethnic groups because few Sukuma are formally educated and able to write in Swahili. |
|
Hockney saw the object that would become the bane of office secretaries everywhere as bringing him closer to his art. |
|
Reporters loved Brady, and I dare say the love was mutual, which is not always the case with press secretaries. |
|
Republicans currently dominate the breakdown, with 27 GOP secretaries of state in the 47 states that have the position. |
|
But they sort of ran the place, secretaries or organisers or whatever they were, and we kids loved them, really loved them and they were as warm as toast. |
|
The education system remained functioning but without the assistance of school secretaries, janitors, laboratory workers and other administrative employees. |
|
Her outspokenness did not endear Rogers to the elite clique of former social secretaries. |
|
But for these clerks and secretaries, war is a faraway, almost abstract concept. |
|
Everyone, from secretaries to engine assemblers, can tell you what kind of return their work creates for the company, and the costs of the products they use. |
|
Unlike other soporific cabinet secretaries, Homeland Security director is a position people really do care about. |
|
Many of the folks he daps are simply secretaries, security, and even the janitorial staff. |
|
I saw bank tellers in cheap suits talking tripe to gullible secretaries. |
|
Office stationery cupboards used to be crammed with reams of carbon paper sold to gullible secretaries by pushy salesmen during the lunch hour when the boss was out. |
|
What really happened was that for many decades offices employed vastly overqualified women to be secretaries, paying them a fraction of what they were worth. |
|
The secretary of the year competition was initiated to inspire and equip secretaries, office professionals and personal assistants to attain excellence. |
|
On December 1, 1865, the secretaries of state for the colonies tore up the Jamaican Constitution and recommended a Crown Colony government for the island. |
|
First the czar appointed the governors of the regions, then in Soviet times the general secretary of the Communist Party named the regional party secretaries. |
|
The first minister, the cabinet secretaries and the Scottish law officers are the members of the Scottish Government. |
|
The government consists of cabinet secretaries, who attend cabinet meetings, and ministers, who do not. |
|
These five secretaries of state remained constant thereafter until after the first world war. |
|
|
Notable general secretaries of the society later in the 20th century were Max Warren and John Vernon Taylor. |
|
In addition, they took depositions and acted as secretaries to the Lord Chancellor, maintaining the plea rolls. |
|
Ministers, junior ministers and parliamentary private secretaries who vote against the whips' instructions usually resign. |
|
The Scottish Government's cabinet comprises nine cabinet secretaries, who form the Cabinet of Scotland. |
|
Government secretaries and other officials are seated on the right hand side of the President in the chamber. |
|
There are also twelve other ministers, who work alongside the cabinet secretaries in their appointed areas. |
|
In its editorial the Times said, The United Nations has had eight secretaries general. |
|
Ministers are similarly appointed to assist cabinet secretaries in their work. |
|
The PS1,250 per annum related to executive secretaries who for example work for the chairmen of public companies. |
|
This concerns the Central Advisory Council, or CAC, the group of LAC presidents, vice presidents, secretaries and treasurers. |
|
It is led by the first minister, who selects the cabinet secretaries and ministers with approval of parliament. |
|
I arrive at twelve-twenty-five and the secretaries are in a tizzy. |
|
Officers subscribe their official acts, and secretaries and clerks subscribe copies or records. |
|
I think I have a method of remedying this sorryful condition. Let each Local elect three press secretaries. |
|
The meeting will conclude its work by tomorrow, with a number of decisions and recommendations to be adopted by GCC secretaries general. |
|
The prime minister is the head of government and proposes other ministers and secretaries of state. |
|
Hanlin academicians became grand secretaries, and they dismantled his father's unpopular militaristic policies to restore civil government. |
|
It is led by the First Minister of Scotland, who selects the cabinet secretaries and ministers and defines their areas of responsibility. |
|
If they were secretaries, take away 15 for lack of originality. |
|
This is how, in 1985, 200 custodians employed their wives as handymen but then used them as private secretaries. |
|
|
The cabinet usually consists of 13 to 16 ministers and a varying number of state secretaries. |
|
News organizations demean themselves by assigning reporters to waste time being propagandized press secretaries. |
|
Under the charter, the president, two secretaries and the treasurer are collectively the officers of the society. |
|
They are thus very much more than secretaries and often in fact are the lynch pin of the organisation. |
|
The government consists of cabinet secretaries, who attend cabinet meetings, and ministers who do not, and also of a counsel general. |
|
He overruled his secretaries by ordering that grain should be sent immediately to relieve disaster areas. |
|
The chief executive's cabinet is made up of five policy secretaries and is advised by the Executive Council of Macau, which has between seven and eleven members. |
|
Barry Young totally outplayed Brian Lewis to win the secretaries singles 21-5 and Inga Gillespie won the ladies champion of champions 21-12 mostly scoring in twos. |
|
The party has in all 10 general secretaries and 40 secretaries. |
|
Brushing aside the existence of the trust deficit, foreign secretaries of the two countries agreed to solve all outstanding issues through dialogue. |
|
Good examples of employees under hidden stress are the nation's pink-collar workers. This group includes secretaries, clerks, data processors, telephone operators, and others. |
|
By the end of the twentieth century, virtually all departmental cabinet ministers were secretaries of state, with the notable exception of the Chancellor of the Exchequer. |
|
Elizabeth's principal secretaries Sir Francis Walsingham and William Cecil, Lord Burghley, watched Mary carefully with the aid of spies placed in Mary's household. |
|
The school secretaries dispense medications, and for diabetic students, they help count carbs, measure insulin doses, and can give emergency glucogen shots. |
|
The government is composed of cabinet secretaries and ministers. |
|
There are even drop-front secretaries, hallstands and Cheval mirrors. |
|
Featuring shocking, surprising and candid confessions, everyday law enforcers, teachers, GPs and secretaries spill the beans on their working lives. |
|
The support staff at such a facility included muleteers, secretaries, blacksmiths, cartwrights, a veterinarian, and a few military police and couriers. |
|