Word: consulting
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...also remarkable how he could be so interested in so many different problems. His wide knowledge both within and without the field of chemistry was recognized and there were usually several people waiting to consult with him on their problems. The members of the faculty of the Medical School were especially frequent visitors because Professor Conant was one of the few organic chemists to have a through knowledge of physical chemistry...
...created three years ago, as an experiment, and has been held since its inception by the Reverend T. L. Harris, who will continue to fulfill its duties until the end of the term. The place was originally created to provide a full time pastor with whom students could consult, and who could handle the other religious problems arising in the University; it was abolished, because of the necessity for economy...
...difficult to keep members of the Board of Preachers at home over the week ends, and most of the visiting preachers were unable to keep office hours after the day on which they delivered the sermon. There was also felt the need of a pastor with whom students could consult on any religious problems that might arise. Recently there has been close cooperation between the office of the Adviser on Religion and the pastors in charge of young people's work in the churches that are attended by Harvard...
...consult the statistics he gathered from this table. The reason for the unpopularity of the cheaper magazines over the more expensive publications is only too apparent. We find our critic's conclusions amazing in the extreme. That they are surely false is proved by the popularity of periodicals like the "New Yorker," "Stage," and "Vanity Fair." Especially to be commended is the Freshman's preference of the "Yale Records" to the "Harvard Lampoon." We might also commend their pertinacity in resisting the wiles of the coy cowboy, who presumptiously attempts to arbitrate on their literary selection--a task hardly suitable...
...logical to expect that with the removal of the Department of Hygiene from Wadsworth House to the present quarters on Holyoke Street, the improvement in equipment would see a like change in the service rendered. To the undergraduate who finds it necessary to consult the University physicians, the more comprehensive office hours, extending with little interruption through the day, and the comfortable waiting rooms with the February sixteenth issue of "Time" are the only evidences of such a change...