Word: collier
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...company are R. C. Burrell '24, former president of the Club, who is to be the stage manager, and D. W. Hallett '24, who will act as his assistant. R. S. Aldrich '25, now, president of the Dramatic Club, will direct the trip as business manager; J. J. Collier '24 is to join the ranks of the actors; and Ross Wilkins '26, will be in charge of the lighting...
Saturday Evening Post, Collier's "and other periodicals which are read by the people...
...Michigan; John S. Bassett, history, Smith; Harry G. Brown, economics, Missouri; Wilbur G. Foye, geology, Wesleyan; Charles Edward A. Winslow, public health, Yale; Lyman P. Wilson, law, Cornell; Erville B. Woods, sociology, Dartmouth; Craig Baird, rhetoric, Bates; Arthur C. L. Brown, English, Northwestern; Dr. Alexander E. Cance, Massachusetts ; Theodore Collier, history, Brown; Wilbur H. Cherry, law, Minnesota; Horace A. Eaton, English, Syracuse; Hugh Hartshorne, religious education, California; Harold C. Goddard, English, Swarthmore; Edwin Greenlaw, dean of the Graduate School, North Carolina...
Professor Raymond MacDonald Alden G. '96 from the University of California heads the list of visiting instructors. Professor MacDonald is the author of numerous books on the study of English literature and is a frequent contributor to educational journals. In 1905 he won a prize in "Collier's" short story contest. Among other prominent visiting instructors are Walter Van Dyke Bingham, Professor of Psychology at Carnegle Institute of Technology; Charles Wendell David, G. '18, Associate Professor of History at Bryn Mawr College; Harlan Cameron Hines, Professor of Education at the University of California, and Arthur Stanley Pease, Professor of Classics...
...Collier's promised that from all cities which applied for treatment it would select one, and "put all we've got into it." Except for advertising purposes, the founding of city government hardly has the appearance of being "publishing" in the ordinary sense. But Collier's may be leading the way to "the New Press." Perhaps the press, like the drug store, will become an omnivendor...