Word: danae
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...Dana, R. L., '04, Darling, E. M., '19, Desmond, T., '08, Dodd, M., '17, Doherty, J. A., '16, Donovan, H. N., '17, Donovan, J. D., '10, Douglas, C., '17, Drinkwater, A. '00, Dudley, J. C., '04, Dunning...
Talk of professional revolt and student mutiny continues to come out of Columbia, following the dismissals of Professors Cattell and Dana. Why? In most walks of life a man who fails to make good loses his job; and what failure can be more disastrous than a moral failure? No man can assail the national policy now without aiding Kaiserism. No man can counsel youth to disobey the law and expect to escape the consequences. New York World...
...YORK, N. Y., October 10, 1917.--Five hundred Columbia students met at 11 o'clock today, on the library steps, following an announcement that a protest would be made against the Trustees in expelling Professors Dana and Cattell and causing Professor Beard's resignation. The meeting was addressed by former instructor Durant of the Philosophy Department who said in pant: "Professor Beard has offered his life and career as a sacrifice to the freedom of speech." Several students also spoke, one saying the meeting was not in the best interests of Columbia. A Freshman struck the true spirit...
Asst. Prof. C. N. Jackson, Beck 25; G. K. Noble, Claverly 31; J. H. Sample, Craigie 402; R. R. Foley, Dana 37; A. L. Horst '09, Drayton 8; G. P. Pennoyer '14, Dunster 23; F. H. Kennedy, Gannett 8; Arthur Burkhard, Fairfax 13; A. M. Goodale '13, Gore A 25; W. S. Felton, Gore C 33; C. L. McAlpine '01, Gore D 24; Prof. E. P. Kohler (resident), Gore E 24; G. H. Hankin, Grays 43; Professor Copeland, Hollis 15; Prof. C. L. Jackson, Holworthy 11; P. D. Woodbridge, Matthews 40; Prof. A. C. Coolidge '87, Randolph...
Once again Columbia comes before the world in an unenviable light. In this morning's paper we read of the expulsion of Professors Cattell and Dana from that university for holding pacifist views (oh, la belle raison!). Some of us still hold to the belief (is it so unreasonable?) that a professor dissenting from the majority opinion respecting the governmental war policy is not thereby disqualified from teaching psychology or comparative literature. The Columbia Faculty, however, take the opposite view and apparently agree with the Imperial German Government that political orthodoxy is the test of intellectual capacity. Indeed one might...