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Word: buffalo (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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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...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE MAIL | 5/29/1940 | See Source »

...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...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROCTORS ARE ANNOUNCED | 5/28/1940 | See Source »

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...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 28 MEN GIVEN FELLOWSHIPS FOR BUSINESS RESEARCH | 5/23/1940 | See Source »

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 Already they had withdrawn well west of the Mississippi, and already they wore U. S. store blankets, not buffalo robes; but they still retained most of the shapes of their freedom and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...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Indians, Then & Now | 5/20/1940 | See Source »

...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...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GRADUATE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AWARDS SCHOLARSHIPS TO FORTY-SIX | 5/9/1940 | See Source »

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