Word: chase
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...GOVERNMENT 7b Mon. at 12 Harvard 5 22b* Mon. at 12 Sever 24 28 Mon. at 12 Harvard 1 29b Mon. at 11 Emerson F 30 Tues. at 12 Harvard 1 GREEK A** Mon. at 12 Sever 18 2* ** Tues. at 10 Sever 30 HISTORY C* ** Consult Mr. Chase--History Consult Professor Whitney --Hist. and Lit. 2b Mon. at 12 Harvard 6 3b Mon. at 9 Sever 18 5b Mon. at 11 New Lecture Hall 6 Mon. at 12 Emerson H 10b Mon. at 10 Harvard 2 13** Mon. at 11 Harvard 1 15** Tues. at 10 Harvard...
...Chase's preference for this type of teacher relates to the second point he makes, that the President is a scientist, and therefore a little at sea among humane studies. Of this one must say that there might be a grain of truth in it, but probably is not. A scientist could be in error on the matter, but the error would not be the one Mr. Chase thinks he sees. It is not that research is valuable to a teacher in science and unnecessary to a teacher in the humanities, but that it should be pursued in a different...
...feel that Mr. Chase has probably taken a more clear cut stand than he really meant to take. In order to make perfectly clear the nature of the discomfort of mind he felt over the President's report, he has placed upon the report the most unfavorable construction possible. For the purpose of his own argument he assumes practically that when the President, says scholar he means clerk. This seems to me somewhat ungrounded. We all know the types in question. We have at Harvard some real scholars and teachers, whom we all recognize and admire. In the graduate school...
...Chase assumes that the latter type is within the meaning of the President when the President says "scholar." I think Mr. Chase has raised a straw man. In opposition he offers a picture which I must say seems to me an ideal secondary school master leading youth to great books by the example of his own love of them...
...award of scholarships from the money left over after donations to charitable organizations, a radical departure from the usual budgetary procedure of the Student Council, was revealed last night by Richard G. Ames '34, president of the organization. The plan which has been worked out by Ames and Theodore Chase '34, treasurer of the council, calls for the award of two or more substantial scholarships yearly to undergraduates who are active in college affairs...