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Died. Paul Shorey, 7, classicist, long-time head of the University of Chicago's Greek Department (1896-1927); after long illness following a paralytic stroke; in Chicago. Dr. Shorey was a member of his university's" original faculty (1892), could recite from memory the Iliad's 15,693 lines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, May 7, 1934 | 5/7/1934 | See Source »

...something besides "cum laude." In the course of the discussion, one resourceful professor hit upon the idea of making it a degree "with distinction" Instead of with the customary honors. The solution seemed to please everyone. Just as it was on the verge of being voted on, a classicist Interposed an objection. "You've got to translate it into Latin," he pointed out, "and when you translate 'with distinction' it becomes 'cum laude'." The faculty gave it up and decided to leave the name but change the requirements...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CRIME | 2/9/1934 | See Source »

...With the enrolment limited to 300 and an average of only seven students under each professor, Haverford honors will be available to all. The new plan was lavishly saluted during the centenary celebrations last week, notably by Dr. William Wistar Comfort, president of Haverford since 1917, a genial, highbrowed classicist and cricket-player whom the students call "Uncle Billy" and whose precept has been: "Improve the breed of college men by a selective process...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Haverford's 100th | 10/16/1933 | See Source »

...Such terms as classicism, romanticism, symbolism, and the like should be discouraged. They are useful only for classifications of the past and have no utility in the present except to declare what one is not. It would be rediculous for a man to set out, now, to become a classicist or a romanticist. All can do is to try to think clearly to know one's feelings, and to use the right words in the right order...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: T. S. Eliot Optimistic About Future of English Language In View of New Forms--"Free Verse" Not Replacing Old Type | 3/3/1933 | See Source »

Craigenputtock and Wilheim Meister--the rough, wild, churlish island upon which Johnson drew the carriage shade before an indignant Boswell, and the balanced periods of a great German classicist--these were the opposing forces which shaped the life of Thomas Carlyle. The land tore the veils from his vision, made him a poet and a seer--the other involved him in a nebulous World-Idea and a style of tortured courage. Never did one man, and a lone Scotchman, strive to embody in himself ideals so contradictory--guessing like a child about Mirabeau, about Lafayette, and guessing rightly, but struggling...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Student Vagabond | 2/18/1933 | See Source »

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