Word: buffalo
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...Baxter went further and discussed academic freedom: "Chancellor Capen of the University of Buffalo . . . before the Association of American University Professors . . . referred to the 'exhibitionists' and 'mountebanks' in the academic world 'who to feed their own vanity, recklessly stake the profession's most precious and hard-won possession'." Baxter's remaining discussion of "the danger that the teacher will seek to impose his own political beliefs on his students" merits study...
...Assistant in History; Gustav Bergson A.M. '36, Instructor in Physics and Communication Engineering; Carl L. Billman '35, Assistant in History; Arthur R. Borden Jr. '39, of Roslindale, Francis G. Collier A.M. '33, of West Somerville.; John L. Dampeer '38, of Cleveland, O.; Walter H. Ellis Jr. of Buffalo, N. Y.; Felowes D. Gardner '38, of Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y.; Floyd K. Haskell '37, of Morristown, N. J.; Frank W. Hatfield '38, of Ashland, Pa.; Christopher Huntington '32, Assistant in German; Francis Keppel '38, Assistant Dean of Harvard College; George F. Lowman '38, of New Canaan, Conn.; George...
George W. Bergquist, of Minneapolis, Minn., Harvard '38; Gordon F. Bloom, of Buffalo, N. Y., Buffalo '39; James MacG. Burns, of Burlington, Mass., Williams '39; Arthur A. Compton, of Chicago, Ill., Wooster, '39; Charles H. Coombs, Jr., of Brockton, Harvard '40; James George, of Toronto, Ont., Canada, University of Toronto '40; Paul G. Haaga, of Memphis, Tenn., Tennessee '37; William E. Jaqua, of Claremont, Calif., Pomona '38; Charles F. Kiefer, Jr., of New York, George Washington University '40; Arthur A. Maass, of New York, Johns Hopkins University...
There were at that time about 3,000 of the Osage. Already they had withdrawn well west of the Mississippi, and already they wore U. S. store blankets, not buffalo robes; but they still retained most of the shapes of their freedom and integrity. Their government was a neat interlocking of democracy and absolutism; their discipline in conference moved Tixier to admiration; their use of property was virtually without problems. Their wealth was in horses. The poor were the guests of the rich at their own desire; upon request, any hunter yielded up to half of any animal...
...Brunswick, N. J., S.M. Rutgers '40; Albert C. Ringelstein, of New York, N. Y., S.M. Virginia Polytechnic Institute '38; Wallace H. Robinson Jr., of Washington, D. C., S.B. Virginia Polytechnic Institute '40; August T. Rossano, of New York, N. Y., S.B. M.I.T. '38; Irving M. Saffitz, of Buffalo, N. Y., B.E.E. Cornell '40; Morris Silberman, of Baltimore, Md., S.B. Georgia School of Technology...