Word: dartmouth
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Besides this immediate necessity, Harvard seems to have much the same problem as the other eastern universities, most of which like Yale and Dartmouth, have flourishing personnel departments. It may be argued that Harvard, because, of its location, or some tradition of individualism, has less need of vocational guidance. This point of view, however, seems a confusion of the question, in that more opportunities for placement are not sufficient to guide undecided Seniors in choosing a place. The problem, in other words, is bigger than local differences and is apparently becoming more pressing in proportion as the opportunities open...
...same token, all such guidance should be voluntary and not compulsory on the student. Compulsory interviews would always be conducted under an 'obvious psychological handicap. Moreover, relatively few students are interested in vocational advice until the senior year. The experience of the Dartmouth office and Mr. Daly's office indicates this. Hence the compulsory guidance of underclassmen would be in the nature of an imposition, as well as superfluous. Vocational guidance, in short, should make its own way on its own merits...
Gordon Willard Allport, '19, A.M. '21, Ph.D. '22, Sheldon Fellow from 1922 until 1924 at Berlin, Marburg, and Cambridge, England, has been appointed Assistant Professor of Psychology at Harvard from September, 1930. Professor Allport is at present Assistant Professor of Psychology at Dartmouth, where he has held this position since...
Coach Mitchell will send Howard Whitmore '29 after today's tilt. He held Dartmouth to eight hits in Friday's eleven inning clash. The Harvard mentor was uncertain at a late hour last night whether to start B. H. Ticknor '31, one of the Crimson's leading extra-base sluggers, or E. R. Todd '29, whose stellar hitting featured the game with the Bruins, in the centerfield post...
...buck. Oxford and Cambridge have concentrated their athletic relations to dual meets with each-other even since the inception of varsity athletics at the two universities. In the matter of the proposed Harvard plan there would be the necessary break-down of nearly a century of tradition. The Dartmouth and Holy Cross games have become a tradition strongly entrenched in the minds of Harvard men. And aside from the local tradition, there is the doubly strong national feeling for intercollegiate sport. National sentiment is strong not only for intercollegiate sport but also for inter-sectional competition...