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is warden
verb
To carry out the duties of a warden.
Exact(5)
· Ben Pimlott is Warden of Goldsmiths College and has written biographies of Hugh Dalton, Harold Wilson and the Queen.
Both authors are academics: Ms MacMillan is warden of St Antony's, Oxford; Mr Clark professor of modern European history at Cambridge.
Timothy McFadden, an Irishman who is warden at the detention center of the international war crimes tribunal, described some other perks.
Recently, I read The Uses and Abuses of History by Margaret MacMillan, a Canadian who is warden of St Antony's College, Oxford.
The curators, members of the Truth Commission and Peruvian photographers are all scrambling to prod the government of President Alejandro Toledo, which by decree is warden of the photographs, to commit itself to financing a permanent museum, either in Casa Riva Aguero or another locale.
Similar(55)
During the three years he was warden, he gave the go-ahead for 89 executions.
He held professorships at London, Cambridge and Bristol and was warden of Keble College, Oxford.
Before joining the New York police, he was warden of the Passaic County Jail in New Jersey.
Harrelson's uncle had been warden of the Lovelady unit of the Texas Department of Corrections, and his father was a guard there.
William Archibald Spooner, a quintessential Victorian clergyman/academic (though he lived on until 1930), was warden of New College, Oxford, from 1903 to 1924.
Steven Ornoski, who was warden during the Morales matter, calls it "the worst prison in the California system: it's old, filthy, noisy, poorly laid out, and understaffed.
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