Word: cutten
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Stanley King, president of Amherst, Will make the feature address. Others who will participate in the program are Frederick C. Ferry, president emeritus of Hamilton, and President Fox and Cutten of Union and Colgate Colleges respectively...
President George B. Cutten of Colgate University thought that the university was always held responsible for what its paper said and that therefore "it seems necessary that some control should be held over the paper." President Edmund E. Day of Cornell University said that although the "Daily Sun" was usually well-behaved, the "need" for censorship might arise elsewhere. President Dixon R. Fox of Union College agreed that censorship might be necessary "inasmuch as it is perfectly possible for such a publication to damage the public reputation of an institution severely." And the reader paused to re-examine the reputations...
...Because he has a tendency to block the attack of his own side," Mr. Broun, against the advice of friends, made A.F. of L.'s President William Green centre instead of a blocking back. At "extreme" right end he placed Colgate's spoon-collecting President George Barton Cutten, onetime (1897-98) star Yale halfback of whom Mr. Broun wrote, "Whenever three or four manufacturers are gathered together, there is the not very famous educator giving it the old college...
...convention from the usual two days to include a third called "Labor Day," the manufacturers turned many an unfamiliar stone in their search for enlightenment. They will listen to Leo Wolman on the labor outlook; General Hugh Johnson on "Wages & Hours Legislation;" Colgate University's President George Barton Cutten on "Hiatus in Social Re-sponsibility;" M. I. T.'s President Karl Taylor Compton and Caltec's Robert Andrews Millikan on Science & Industry. For national and international information the manufacturers will look to Chairman Doughton of the House Ways & Means Committee and Sir Wilmott Lewis, suave, ironical Washington...
...Colgate University (Hamilton, N. Y.), irritated President George Barton Cutten barked at his incoming freshmen: "We have heard a lot and read reams about the predatory rich, but is it not time that someone said something about the parasitic pauper? . . . A parasite thinks the world owes him a living. . . . During nine months of prenatal life, and years of infancy, a person acquires parasitic habits. . . . The parasite has never been properly weaned psychologically and he is always hunting around for a nipple...